Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a newborn currently, but when DS was born at 32 weeks, he received a vaccine for RSV for preemies.
I'm not sure why it's not given out to all newborns, maybe you can ask your pediatrician.
Also, clinical studies have just shown that a new vaccine given to pregnant mothers protects their newborns against RSV. It's not available right now, but it's something to follow.
It's 10k and only available to premies.
This is one of the things I hate most about the USA: life-saving meds exist, but the government is too weak to force pharmaceutical companies to lower their prices, like the European Union and other countries do. Same for the life-saving progesterone injection to prevent pre-term labor. Same for insulin.
It's an outrage.
It isn’t even available to 32 weekers any more. No evidence that it improves outcomes unless the preemie is born before 28 weeks. So that is what insurance companies cover now.
https://www.fda.gov/drugs/postmarket-drug-safety-information-patients-and-providers/makena-hydroxyprogesterone-caproate-injection-information
It didn’t do anything, has some bad side effects, and was super expensive.
Also, the progesterone was a big disaster. It just got pulled.
Only one progesterone got pulled, the others work. I was one of the lucky recipient of progesterone injections back in the day, and so was my mother. Otherwise I'd have died as a micro-preemie, and my kid would have too. The RSV vaccine works.
Have you actually looked at the data? Synagis barely moves the needle.
Progesterone has zero evidence of working. That was the whole thing with Makena. Pre-Makena, it was prescribed off-label with no data to support it. Then the poorly run Makena trial. Then it got sold. They had to do post-approval surveillance and the data was not good.
It doesn’t get prescribed very often now. Little benefit and lots of potential issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a newborn currently, but when DS was born at 32 weeks, he received a vaccine for RSV for preemies.
I'm not sure why it's not given out to all newborns, maybe you can ask your pediatrician.
Also, clinical studies have just shown that a new vaccine given to pregnant mothers protects their newborns against RSV. It's not available right now, but it's something to follow.
It's 10k and only available to premies.
This is one of the things I hate most about the USA: life-saving meds exist, but the government is too weak to force pharmaceutical companies to lower their prices, like the European Union and other countries do. Same for the life-saving progesterone injection to prevent pre-term labor. Same for insulin.
It's an outrage.
It isn’t even available to 32 weekers any more. No evidence that it improves outcomes unless the preemie is born before 28 weeks. So that is what insurance companies cover now.
https://www.fda.gov/drugs/postmarket-drug-safety-information-patients-and-providers/makena-hydroxyprogesterone-caproate-injection-information
It didn’t do anything, has some bad side effects, and was super expensive.
Also, the progesterone was a big disaster. It just got pulled.
Only one progesterone got pulled, the others work. I was one of the lucky recipient of progesterone injections back in the day, and so was my mother. Otherwise I'd have died as a micro-preemie, and my kid would have too. The RSV vaccine works.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a newborn currently, but when DS was born at 32 weeks, he received a vaccine for RSV for preemies.
I'm not sure why it's not given out to all newborns, maybe you can ask your pediatrician.
Also, clinical studies have just shown that a new vaccine given to pregnant mothers protects their newborns against RSV. It's not available right now, but it's something to follow.
It's 10k and only available to premies.
This is one of the things I hate most about the USA: life-saving meds exist, but the government is too weak to force pharmaceutical companies to lower their prices, like the European Union and other countries do. Same for the life-saving progesterone injection to prevent pre-term labor. Same for insulin.
It's an outrage.
It isn’t even available to 32 weekers any more. No evidence that it improves outcomes unless the preemie is born before 28 weeks. So that is what insurance companies cover now.
https://www.fda.gov/drugs/postmarket-drug-safety-information-patients-and-providers/makena-hydroxyprogesterone-caproate-injection-information
It didn’t do anything, has some bad side effects, and was super expensive.
Also, the progesterone was a big disaster. It just got pulled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a newborn currently, but when DS was born at 32 weeks, he received a vaccine for RSV for preemies.
I'm not sure why it's not given out to all newborns, maybe you can ask your pediatrician.
Also, clinical studies have just shown that a new vaccine given to pregnant mothers protects their newborns against RSV. It's not available right now, but it's something to follow.
It's 10k and only available to premies.
This is one of the things I hate most about the USA: life-saving meds exist, but the government is too weak to force pharmaceutical companies to lower their prices, like the European Union and other countries do. Same for the life-saving progesterone injection to prevent pre-term labor. Same for insulin.
It's an outrage.
It isn’t even available to 32 weekers any more. No evidence that it improves outcomes unless the preemie is born before 28 weeks. So that is what insurance companies cover now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a newborn currently, but when DS was born at 32 weeks, he received a vaccine for RSV for preemies.
I'm not sure why it's not given out to all newborns, maybe you can ask your pediatrician.
Also, clinical studies have just shown that a new vaccine given to pregnant mothers protects their newborns against RSV. It's not available right now, but it's something to follow.
It's 10k and only available to premies.
This is one of the things I hate most about the USA: life-saving meds exist, but the government is too weak to force pharmaceutical companies to lower their prices, like the European Union and other countries do. Same for the life-saving progesterone injection to prevent pre-term labor. Same for insulin.
It's an outrage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't have a newborn currently, but when DS was born at 32 weeks, he received a vaccine for RSV for preemies.
I'm not sure why it's not given out to all newborns, maybe you can ask your pediatrician.
Also, clinical studies have just shown that a new vaccine given to pregnant mothers protects their newborns against RSV. It's not available right now, but it's something to follow.
It's 10k and only available to premies.
Anonymous wrote:I don't have a newborn currently, but when DS was born at 32 weeks, he received a vaccine for RSV for preemies.
I'm not sure why it's not given out to all newborns, maybe you can ask your pediatrician.
Also, clinical studies have just shown that a new vaccine given to pregnant mothers protects their newborns against RSV. It's not available right now, but it's something to follow.