The answer to the most asked question has been found! Do Covid vaccines affect fertility?

The answer to the most asked question has been found

The results of the research conducted in the USA and England on the Covid vaccine revealed the answer to the question that women were most curious about. The answer to the question of whether the vaccine, which causes pregnancy and those planning to become pregnant, has anything to do with fertility, has finally become clear.

It has helped address the concerns of women undergoing IVF or fertility treatment about the covid vaccine. Studies have shown that the covid vaccine does not affect a woman’s chances of having children.

Researchers in New York reported that the Covid vaccine did not have a negative effect on women undergoing IVF treatment.

THE RESULTS ARE THE SAME

The experts studied pregnant women who were vaccinated with two doses of Pfizer/BioNTech or Moderna vaccines and those who did not. It was reported that the results were the same for both parties.

Lead author of the study, Dr Devora Aharon, added that there was no difference in ‘egg quality or embryo development’ between vaccinated and unvaccinated women.

“Our findings that vaccination has no effect on fertility should be reassuring for those trying to conceive or those in early pregnancy,” Aharon said.

NO INCREASE IN BIRTH RATE OR A miscarriage

Experts stated that, especially due to the issue of ‘fertility’, the opposition to vaccination among women is on the rise and these claims are constantly being made.

However, despite the vaccination of billions of women worldwide, there has been no increase in miscarriages or significant decreases in birth rates.

NOT DETECTED

And the latest study failed to pinpoint the mechanism by which vaccines prevent fertility or pregnancy.

The Royal University of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, composed of the best obstetricians in the UK, stated that ‘there is no biologically plausible mechanism by which current vaccines would cause any effect on a woman’s fertility’.

The school’s website states, “No evidence has been presented that vaccinated women have had fertility problems.”

For the latest study, published in the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology, scientists from the New York Associates of Reproductive Medicine examined 2,152 women, of whom only 20 percent had double-vaccinated, and found no difference in results.

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