Please look up the source of this article.
The artricle is based partly on melodramatic anecdotal information. It is based partly on adverse assumptions based upon being denied data. It is based partly on data on adverse pregnancy outcomes which is NOT CONTROLLED by comparison with adverse pregnancy outcomes in comparable patients NOT given the vaccines.
The stats on pregnancy, as I recall them vaguely, include a huge percentage of fetal losses in early pregnancy (25%), which is related to the reason why new medications are rarely "approved" for pregnant women. Drug companies rarely undertake the extensive and expensive clinical testing protocols that would be necessary to declare a medication "safe" in pregnant women.
A year ago the CDC recommended the following:
COVID-19 Vaccines While Pregnant or Breastfeeding
What You Need to Know
- People who are pregnant or recently pregnant are more likely to get severely ill with COVID-19 compared with people who are not pregnant.
- Getting a COVID-19 vaccine can help protect you from severe illness from COVID-19.
- COVID-19 vaccination is recommended for people who are pregnant, breastfeeding, trying to get pregnant now, or might become pregnant in the future.
- People who are pregnant may receive a COVID-19 vaccine booster shot.
- Evidence about the safety and effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy has been growing. These data suggest that the benefits of receiving a COVID-19 vaccine outweigh any known or potential risks of vaccination during pregnancy.
- There is currently no evidence that any vaccines, including COVID-19 vaccines, cause fertility problems in women or men.
I don't know what the current recommendation is.
The article referenced, considering the likelihood of political and religious contamination is probably worse than useless on that basis alone. Internally, it demonstrates ignorance of the scientific method regarding the ascertainment of causes in complex systems.
Denis