In the era of COVID-19, pregnant and postpartum women, an already vulnerable group, are facing unforeseen and compounding stressful events with reduced social protections. We argue that to prevent harmful consequences that may surpass the effects of the crisis itself for pregnant women and their families, it is imperative to prioritize maintaining formal and informal sources of social support for mothers in proposed infection control policies. Key Messages Pregnant, laboring, and postpartum women are navigating the challenges inherent to the perinatal period against the backdrop of a global pandemic but without a key protective factor—social support. Formal and informal social support systems for mothers need to be prioritized, even during pandemics, and failure to do so will greatly affect mothers, their infants, and their whole households. When determining policies to mitigate the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), policy makers should take a harm reduction approach that incorporates feasible and innovative strategies to ensure the continuation of maternal social support. Policy makers need to engage and empower mothers as well as the associated professional communities to voice their needs and to inform and participate in the policy formulation process to ensure the creation of policies that are better suited to maternal social support needs during the pandemic.
【초록키워드】 COVID-19, coronavirus disease, infection control, pandemic, global pandemic, Policy, pregnant women, Spread, Infants, Pandemics, Community, women, Protective, mother, pregnant, Formal, Support, reduction, message, Effect, Affect, mitigate, approach, Prevent, consequence, event, reduced, imperative, feasible, inherent, engage, perinatal period, 【제목키워드】 Population, Maternal, maintaining,