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Reuters
Reuters
Entertainment
Maxim Shemetov

For mothers with coronavirus, baby's first coo is over the phone

A medical specialist wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) takes care of a newborn baby at the maternity ward of the City Clinical Hospital Number 15 named after O. Filatov, which delivers treatment to patients infected with the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Moscow, Russia May 25, 2020. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov

"It's a girl and she is fine, we all are fine," said Rayhona, 23. "They have shown her to me on a smartphone."

More than 150 babies have been born to mothers with suspected coronavirus infections at Moscow's City Clinical Hospital Number 15, and the hospital says not a single newborn caught the infection. But to achieve that, the babies are separated from their mothers at birth, breastfeeding is banned, and the mothers are kept quarantined in a ward for two weeks.

A medical specialist wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) takes care of patients at a maternity ward of the City Clinical Hospital Number 15 named after O. Filatov, which delivers treatment to people infected with the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Moscow, Russia May 25, 2020. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov

Rayhona wore a mask and was hooked up to medical devices, sharing a room with another new mother also suspected of carrying the virus.

The mothers "are admitted with some respiratory distress already and we need to be very professional to determine when to deliver the baby and how to deliver it," the hospital's head doctor, Valeriy Vechorko, told Reuters. "I can say this for sure – we did not have a single transmission of the virus to a baby."

Until they are released from quarantine, mothers can communicate with their new babies only via video calls.

Valeriy Vechorko, chief physician of the City Clinical Hospital Number 15 named after O. Filatov, which delivers treatment to patients infected with the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), poses for a picture in Moscow, Russia May 25, 2020. Picture taken May 25, 2020. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov

The mothers "are scared - more scared than usual at least - as they are worried not only about themselves but about their baby as well," said hospital cardiologist Olga Lapochkina.

"We try to keep mothers in touch with the babies via video links. Doctors show them and it really helps."

(Writing by Maria Vasilyeva/Andrew Osborn; Editing by Peter Graff)

Valeriy Vechorko, chief physician of the City Clinical Hospital Number 15 named after O. Filatov, which delivers treatment to patients infected with the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), poses for a picture in Moscow, Russia May 25, 2020. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov
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