Share
The Washington Post
Niharika Sathe, a 34-year-old internal medicine physician in New Jersey, first heard the fertility rumor from another doctor.
The friend confided that she would decline the coronavirus vaccine because of something she’d seen online — that the shot could cause the immune system to attack the placenta, potentially leading to miscarriage and infertility. Sathe, who was early in her pregnancy at the time but had not told anyone, spent the next few weeks scrutinizing information from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine and calling trusted experts to investigate the report.
In the end, she determined the rumor had no basis in fact, and both she and her friend wound up getting the vaccine. But the experience left her rattled.
“That kind of misinformation is really scary,” Sathe said, adding, “It has enough science to sound potentially plausible.”
By Ariana Eunjung Cha | 22 Feb 2021
RELATED TOPICS:
Tatum to Miss Remainder of Playoffs After Achilles Tendon Surgery
13 hours ago
Fresno Police Seek Public’s Help Identifying Shooting Suspect
14 hours ago
MLB Reinstates Pete Rose and Shoeless Joe Jackson, Making Them Hall of Fame Eligible
14 hours ago
Global Eggs Completes Acquisition in US, Closes New Deal in Europe
16 hours ago
‘I Never Said He Called My Son the N-Word.’ Fresno Unified Trustee Thomas Tries to Erase Accusation Against Former Bullard Coach
17 hours ago
Fresno Unified Substitute Teacher Arrested in Online Child Exploitation Case
9 hours ago
Categories

Fresno Unified Substitute Teacher Arrested in Online Child Exploitation Case

Investors Buy Fig Garden Village. How Much Did It Sell For?

Fresno County DA Wants Teens Tried as Adults in Caleb Quick Murder

Tatum to Miss Remainder of Playoffs After Achilles Tendon Surgery

Fresno Police Seek Public’s Help Identifying Shooting Suspect
