publication date: Apr 22, 2010
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author/source: David Salisbury
What is rubella?
Rubella is a
highly contagious disease. It is easily spread from
person to person by close contact or by
droplets in the air.
Children who catch rubella may experience a
mild rash and a
sore throat and adults (particularly
pregnant women and their
unborn babies) may be
vulnerable to much
more serious consequences.
Women who contract the
virus usually do so through contact with their
own children or children of their friends who have
not been vaccinated against rubella.
I have heard that you should be wary of rubella during pregnancy, why is this the case?The
symptoms of rubella can appear to be mild but the disease becomes a
much more serious matter if it is caught during
pregnancy, when it can cause
miscarriages and
Congential Rubella Syndrome (CRS) in the
unborn baby. CRS can potentially
damage the
sight, hearing, heart and
brain of an unborn child.
Maternal rubella caught in the
first trimester causes this kind of damage in
90 per cent of cases.
I'm pregnant and I'm not sure if I've had the vaccine. What shall I do?You will be offered a
blood test early on in your
pregnancy to assess whether or not you have the
rubella antibodies. If you are
not immune to rubella, you must keep away from anyone who has
rubella, particularly during your first
16 weeks of pregnancy.
If you
come into contact with someone with rubella, you should
see your GP immediately. She will be able to
diagnose rubella and
may offer you a test to see if your
baby has been
affected. If your baby
has been affected by rubella, you will be
encouraged to have some
counselling and talk to your consultant,
GP, nurse or midwife.
How can the MMR jab help prevent rubella?It is
recommended that all children have the
MMR vaccine around
13 months of age and again
before starting school. The reason rubella is included in the
childhood immunisation programme is to prevent children becoming infectious and to stop them
passing the rubella virus to their pregnant mothers or the
pregnant mothers of friends.
It is also
important to immunise women of
childbearing age who have either not been immunised with a r
ubella-containing vaccine or those who do not have
protective antibodies to rubella which is determined through pre-conception or
antenatal screening.