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Pregnancy
Weight Gain
May Predict Later Obesity
Excerpt
By
Charnicia E. Huggins, Reuters Health
NEW YORK (Reuters Health)
- For many women, the battle of the bulge may reach its zenith
during pregnancy and after childbirth, but it may not stop there.
New study findings show that if women retain the weight gained
during pregnancy for even a year after childbirth, they are more
likely to remain overweight or obese for at least another year,
researchers report.
``Women should be aware that there is a bottom level that they
must stay above but also a top level that they must stay below''
for weight gain during pregnancy, Dr. Christine M. Olson, of Cornell
University in Ithaca, New York, told Reuters Health.
Olson and her colleagues followed more than 600 women from the
time they enrolled for prenatal care until 2 years after they
gave birth. They presented their findings last week in Atlanta,
Georgia during the129th Annual Meeting of the American Public
Health Association.
Women who were obese one year after childbirth were 25 times
more likely to remain obese at the 2-year follow-up, the report
indicates. This was evident in nearly two-thirds (64%) of the
women, who were obese during their first and second years after
childbirth.
``In our sample, women's weights don't seem to change substantially
between one and two years postpartum,'' Olson said. ``On average
they retained 0.75 pounds at two years for every one pound retained
at one year.''
Overall, the women were an average 4 pounds heavier at their
2-year follow-up than they were before they became pregnant. Four
in 10 women returned to their pre-pregnancy weights, but nearly
one-quarter were 10 or more pounds heavier than their initial
weights.
The weight change ranged anywhere from a loss of 38 pounds to
a gain of 71 pounds compared with pre-pregnancy weights.
Reference
Source 89
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