Obese before pregnancy linked to increased infant
mortality rates
Pre-pregnancy obesity is strongly
linked with infant mortality and
compliance with weight-gain guidelines during pregnancy have
limited impact on that mortality risk, warns a new study. ‘The findings suggest
that primary care clinicians, OB-GYNs (Obstetrics and gynaecology) and midwives
need to have conversations about weight as part of well-woman care and when
women are contemplating getting pregnant,’ said lead author Eugene Declercq
from Boston University School of Public Health in the US. ‘There is a need for
more open, honest discussions about avoiding the possible risks ofmaternal
obesity on infant health,’ Declercq added. The study, published
online in Obstetrics and Gynecology, claims to be the largest study to date of
the relationship between pre-pregnancy obesity, prenatal weight gain and infant
mortality.
It used birth and death records of more than six million
newborns in 38 states from 2012-2013, which included information on the
mother’s height and pre-pregnancy weight, needed to compute BMI (Body Mass
Index). The researchers examined overall infant mortality in three major
categories: Infants who died from preterm-related causes, congenital anomalies
and sudden unexpected infant death. Infant mortality rates from preterm causes
increased at higher BMIs, with rates twice as high for obese women than for
normal-weight women, the study found.
Source: www.thehealthsite.com
22.01.2016
Multiplication of positive thoughts is
quite powerful to bring about change
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