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Questions and Answers About Smallpox Vaccination while Pregnant or Breastfeeding (page 3)

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Women who are pregnant should not have close contact with anyone who has recently (within the last 28 days) received the smallpox vaccine. A close contact includes anyone living in your household and anyone with whom you have close, physical contact (such as a sex partner or someone you share a bed with). Other friends or people you work with are not considered close contacts.

Is smallpox vaccination or close contact with a recently vaccinated person during pregnancy a reason to consider pregnancy termination?

There have been less than 50 cases of fetal vaccinia ever reported in the world. Because fetal vaccinia is so rare, smallpox vaccination during pregnancy should not be a reason to consider termination of pregnancy.

Is it safe for a woman to breastfeed her baby if a close contact received the smallpox vaccine?

Yes. However, anyone who receives the smallpox vaccine should remember to wash their hands with soap and warm water after direct contact with the vaccination site, or anything that has touched the vaccination site (bandages, clothing, towels, bedding, etc.). This is will help prevent the spread of vaccinia virus to contacts, including young babies. If a breastfeeding mother who has had close contact with a person recently vaccinated against smallpox develops a rash, she should check with her healthcare provider to determine if the rash is related to the smallpox vaccine. If she has a vaccine-related rash, breastfeeding should not take place until all scabs from the rash have fallen off. A woman who desires to maintain her milk supply may continue to pump breast milk, but the milk should be discarded until her scabs fully separate.

What if my obstetrician has been vaccinated?

The close contact required for transmission of vaccinia infection to close contacts is not likely to occur in the healthcare setting. Healthcare workers who have received smallpox vaccine are taking precautions to practice strict vaccination site care and hand hygiene, so that their patients will not come into contact with the vaccination site, or with any materials that have come into contact with the vaccination site.

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