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Obstetricians, who have struggled with how to advise heavier women as U.S. obesity rates have soared over the past two decades, welcomed the guidelines -- especially the recognition that babies born too large tend to grow into overweight children at risk for their own health problems. Not too many years ago it was rare to see a 9-pound, or larger, newborn.
"Pregnant women should not be eating for two," said Dr. Ellen J. Landsberger, who specializes in high-risk pregnancies at New York's Montefiore Medical Center. "You want a healthy baby? On both ends, you have to eat the right amount."
But is it realistic for obese women to gain as little as 11 pounds?
"We think it's possible. We also think it will be a challenge," said Cornell University nutrition specialist Dr. Kathleen Rasmussen, who chaired the Institute of Medicine committee.
In the Bronx, Nyree Paten illustrates that challenge: She had been putting on weight for three years and discovered she was pregnant at her peak, just over 300 pounds, seriously obese even for someone 6 feet tall. Her doctor diagnosed diabetes at her first prenatal checkup. Landsberger found Paten, 35, a nutritionist and prescribed insulin for the diabetes. Paten said she's gained only about 2 pounds by week 24, while regular ultrasounds show her baby is growing well.
"Thank God I've been doing good," says Paten, who feels more energetic because she's eating better. So is her 8-year-old son. First to go: sugary sodas and juices in favor of water.
"It's all about knowing and being educated on how to eat," adds Paten, who's lined up the nutritionist to help her lose weight once her baby is born.
The guidelines say women expecting twins can gain more: 37 to 54 pounds for a normal-weight woman, 31 to 50 pounds for the overweight, 25 to 42 pounds for the obese. There's not enough information to set recommendations for triplets or more.
The institute stressed that the guidelines are aimed at U.S. women, not for parts of the world with different nutritional and obstetric needs.
[Associated
Press;
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