Now, I think I miss those fun moments, so I decided that I can have fun with a street style.” It’s equally fun to watch her street style looks, which can be downright smoldering: She’s worn a gray velour sweatsuit with matching heeled boots (accessorized with a zebra mask and matching baguette bag) as well as a biker chic look with a black moto jacket and leather pants, sweetened up by her daughter’s lunch bag that she was carrying at the moment. To remix her look, Shayk has been taking time to explore her closet and experiment with brighter color palettes. “I had so many different pieces sitting in my closet from years ago,” she says. “When I didn’t know what to wear, I’d wear something simple and black. Now, I figured it is time to use a splash of color in my wardrobe. When you put on some color, it just brings your mood to a different level.” While we love her lime green silk set she wore back in October, you can’t beat a touch of 24-karat gold on the lips. Shayk is golden every time she steps out. Because we are still early on in the vaccine timeline, the answers for many questions remain to be seen. To walk us through what we know and what we don’t know about the vaccine as it relates to maternal health, we asked two experts whose specialties lie in treating and studying women and children—Heidi K. Leftwich, D.O., an assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology in UMass’s Division of Maternal and Fetal Medicine, and Kelly Fradin, M.D., a New York–based pediatrician and author of the recent (and very timely) book Parenting in a Pandemic.
On February 3rd, Anthony Fauci announced that he had seen “no red flags” in the 10,000 pregnant women who had received the vaccine in the U.S. In short, yes, simply because pregnancy itself is designated high risk for the development of severe disease, hospitalization, and even death, says Leftwich. “The MMWR [Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] estimated that pregnant women are at three times higher risk for requiring admission to an ICU or requiring a ventilator [because of COVID-19] and that their risk of death is about 70% higher than their nonpregnant peers,” adds Fradin. That risk is compounded for pregnant women of color. The maternal death rate for black mothers is already double the rate of white mothers, and nationally Black and Latina women are disproportionately affected by COVID-19 during pregnancy. So grave are the concerns around COVID-19 and maternal mortality that legislation to address the issue was introduce...
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