June is National CMV Awareness Month - Week 1 "CMV is common"

June is National CMV Awareness Month - Week 1 "CMV is common"

National legislation has been passed designating the month of June as “National Cytomegalovirus Awareness Month”, and recommending that “more effort be taken to counsel women of childbearing age of the effect this virus can have on their children”. 

Want to help raise awareness of CMV in 2016? Join National CMV’s hashtag awareness campaign and share infographcs, photos, and stories on social media!


New CMV Tagboard
This June, National CMV is launching a new website-based tagboard, a curated public display of all social media posts with the hashtags #stopcmv and #cmvawareness. You can check out the tagboard by simply scrolling down on our homepage!

Hashtags highlight important words or topics on social media.
Adding a “#” at the beginning of a word makes it easy to search and connects all related posts.
Hashtags can be used on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Google+, Flickr, and Vine. 

Each week of June will have a different themed awareness infographic, as well as ideas for a weekly photo that you can post to social media to tell the world about your experience with CMV. Feel free to get creative and be authentic, even if the suggested photos may not apply to your experience--all of our stories are important!

Want your posts to make it to the tagboard? Post your photo directly to National CMV's Facebook fanpage or to your own personal Twitter, Instagram, Google+, Fickr, or Vine.  Just use the hashtags #stopcmv and #cmvawareness and be sure to set your hashtagged posts and photos to “public”!
 
Week 1 (June 1-7): CMV is common
Week 2 (June 8-14): CMV is serious
Week 3 (June 15-21): CMV is preventable
Week 4 (June 22-30): More about CMV

Week 1: CMV is common
Sample social media posts
•    1 in 150 children is born with congenital CMV
•    CMV is the most common virus transmitted from a pregnant woman to her unborn child
•    1 in 3 pregnant women who get CMV will pass the virus to their unborn child
•    CMV is more common than the 29 combined metabolic and endocrine disorders in the recommended US newborn screening panel

Sample photos
•    Pregnancy photo 
•    Baby photo of your child 
•    Current photo of your child
•    Current photo of child with parent, family, and/or siblings

Infographic
“CMV is common” infographic



Official Announcement 
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) report that 1 in every 150 children is born with congenital CMV (cytomegalovirus). CMV is the most common congenital (meaning present at birth) infection in the United States and is the most common viral cause of birth defects and developmental disabilities, including deafness, blindness, cerebral palsy, mental and physical disabilities, seizures, and death.

CMV is a common virus, present in saliva, urine, tears, blood, and mucus, and is carried by 75 percent of healthy infants, toddlers, preschoolers, and children who contract the virus from their peers. About 60 percent of women are at risk for contracting CMV during pregnancy, posing a major risk to mothers, daycare workers, preschool teachers, therapists, and nurses. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and the CDC recommend that OB/GYNs counsel women on basic prevention measures to guard against CMV infection. These include frequent hand washing, not kissing young children on the mouth, and not sharing food, towels, or utensils with them.