Vaccinating childbearing women against tetanus rather than influenza or cholera appears to decrease incidence of tetanus in newborn babies but possible adverse effects not assessed.
Neonatal tetanus is an infection causing rigidity, muscle spasm and often death in newborn babies. It is quite common in income-poor countries and comes from insufficient protection being passed from mother to baby in utero together with infection getting into the baby through the umbilical cord stump. The review of two studies (10,560 infants) assessing vaccinating women of childbearing age showed fewer cases of neonatal tetanus when two or three doses were used, but no potential adverse effects were assessed. Administrative and operational aspects also need to be of good quality for vaccination programmes to be effective.
