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Nutrition During Pregnancy and Lactation

Nutrition During Pregnancy and Lactation. Nutrition for Infants and Toddlers. Mother’s Day Report Card. For many years, Save the Children published the Mother’s Day Report Card which includes data on the health of women and children worldwide

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Nutrition During Pregnancy and Lactation

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  1. Nutrition During Pregnancy and Lactation Nutrition for Infants and Toddlers

  2. Mother’s Day Report Card • For many years, Save the Children published the Mother’s Day Report Card which includes data on the health of women and children worldwide • Highly recommended reading for anyone who works with children • https://www.savethechildren.net/state-worlds-mothers-infographics

  3. Health Threats to Children The most critical threats globally are:  • Pneumonia (18%) • Diarrheal diseases (15%) • Pre-term birth complications (12%) • Birth asphyxia (9%) • Under-nutrition is an underlying cause of ~1/2 under 5 mortality Sub-Saharan Africa > 50% deaths due to malaria, diarrhea, pneumonia

  4. Risk Factors Infant Mortality U.S. • Many of the deaths can be attributed to: • Poor maternal nutrition • Low birth weight/pre-term babies • Lack of prenatal care • Lack of health insurance • SIDS • Nutrition before and during pregnancy is critical to the health of baby

  5. One of the best countries for women & children - Finland • Life expectancy girl born today = 84 • Under 5 mortality rate: 2.9 deaths/1000 live births • Infant mortality rate: 2 deaths/100 live births • Lifetime risk of dying as a result of pregnancy or childbirth: 1 in 12,200 • many countries are lower • E.g. 1/25,500 in Greece • Save the Children, May 2014 Report

  6. United States Data • Life expectancy girl born today = 82 • Under 5 mortality rate: 6.9 deaths/1000 live births • Infant mortality rate 6 deaths/1000 live births • Lifetime risk of dying as a result of pregnancy or childbirth, 1 in 1,800 (may be higher)

  7. One of the worst countries for women & children – Somalia • Lifetime risk of dying as a result of pregnancy or childbirth: 1 in 18 • 1 in 6 infants born die before age 5 • 90% of women have a child die before age 5 • Life expectancy girl born today = 58 • 36% of children under 5 are underweight for their age • 70% lack access to clean water

  8. Where is Somalia?

  9. Afghanistan Haiti 10 worst countries for women and children

  10. One island, two health stories

  11. “Mortality” Definitions • Neonatal mortality rate • death of infants in the 1st 28 days of life • When most child deaths occur • Infant mortality rate • death of infants in the 1st year of life • Both are reported in deaths/1000 live births

  12. Neonatal (<28 days) Mortality Data

  13. Infant (<1 year) Mortality Data

  14. Maine Birth and Infant Deaths

  15. Infant (<1 yr) Mortality Data

  16. Infant (<1 yr) Mortality Data

  17. Infant mortality rates, by state: U.S. - 2010

  18. Leading causes infant death U.S. ‘13 • Congenital malformations • Pre-term/low birth weight • Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) • Maternal complications -------- • 80% infant deaths in developing countries occur in pre-term babies • 50% of infant deaths related to infection

  19. Pre-Term Births by Race

  20. Infant Mortality • Lowest rates for mothers in their late 20’s- early 30’s • Adolescent mothers have the highest infant mortality rate in US • Infant mortality is • 83% higher in unmarried mothers • Higher in smokers • Higher in pre-term infants

  21. Maternal Mortality • All US women: ~14 deaths/100,000 live births* • White women: 10.5 • Black women: 34.8 • Somalia: 732 • Haiti: 359 *28 in another source

  22. Doing Pregnancy Well Matters! It matter for mom and it matters for baby.

  23. “Life-Saving Six” for Keeping Babies Alive, Nutrition Matters • Iron and folate (mom) • Breastfeeding – 1st 6 months exclusively • Complementary feeding – 6 mos + • Vitamin A ( 2 doses /year, child) • Zinc (child) • Decreases diarrheal deaths • Hygiene, water, sanitation

  24. Nutrition During Pregnancy • Time of significant growth for mother and fetus • Goal is to start pregnancy with full nutritional stores

  25. Nutrition During Pregnancy • Of greatest importance pre-pregnancy are having adequate levels of: • Folate • Iron • In Haiti, 73% of children 6-24 months and 60% of pregnant women are anemic.

  26. Caloric Needs During Pregnancy~2,200 - 2,900 kcal/day

  27. Weight Gain Recommendations

  28. Weight Gain • Insufficient maternal weight gain increases risk of low birth weight baby (LBW) • LBW = birth weight less than 5 ½ pounds • LBW are 40x more likely to die in the first year of life than healthy weight baby • 1 in 12 babies in US are of LBW • Black 2x as likely to have a LBW baby as white/Hispanic

  29. “Morning” Sickness (MS) • ~75% of women experience MS during the first months of pregnancy • May be triggered by foods, smells, thought of food • May be related to enhanced sense of smell • Iron supplements may trigger nausea in some • May occur any time of day • Suggestions?......

  30. Weight Gain • Sharp weight gains may signal: • Water retention • Pregnancy induced hypertension ~7% pregnancies • May be associated with low vitamin D levels • Preclampsia – mild hypertension • Eclampsia – more serious • Previously called toxemia

  31. Eclampsia • At greatest risk: • Over 35 and under 17 • Carrying twins or more! • Family/personal history of • Diabetes • First pregnancy • African American descent

  32. Eclampsia • Symptoms/consequences • Edema • Hypertension • Protein in urine • Kidney failure • Liver damage • Convulsions and death of mom and/or baby

  33. Eclampsia • Treatment • Bed rest • Magnesium sulfate (diuretic) • Deliver baby

  34. Nutritional Needs - Pregnancy • Protein • Needs increase by 25 g/day • 1.1 g protein/kg body weight • Page 521 has a good summary of all nutritional needs

  35. Minerals • Minerals • Calcium, no increase • The number of calcium binding proteins increases in the SI. This results in increases absorption. • Critical that diet includes 3-4 servings of calcium rich foods each day. • Iron needs nearly double • Zinc needs go by ~30% • Zinc is found in proteins

  36. Vitamins • B Vitamins • RDA for all goes up by ~30% • Folate needs go up by 50% • Eat more vegetables and select whole grain products. • Vitamin C • Need a little extra

  37. Vitamins • NO EXTRA needed for: • Vitamin D • Vitamin A in the form of active vitamin A • DO NOT TAKE VITAMIN A SUPPLEMENTS DURING PREGNANCY • Increases the risk of serious birth defects • Extra beta-carotene (plant form of vitamin A) is fine and probably good for you

  38. Practices to AVOID • Smoking • Increases risk of LBW, miscarriages, infant death • Caffeine (?) • Heavy coffee drinking may lead to and increased risk of LBW • High levels of caffeine may increase the risk of miscarriage

  39. Practices to AVOID • Fasting or low/no carbohydrate diets • Ketones may slow fetal brain development • Aspartame (?) • Probably OK as long as mom does not have PKU • Recommend no more than 1 Liter of diet soda per day

  40. Practices to AVOID • Eating unpasteurized dairy products, raw cabbage, raw meats • Brie, feta, blue cheeses, goat cheeses • Increased risk of Listeria • Flu-like symptoms • May cause miscarriage and death of mom

  41. Practices to AVOID • Vitamin megadoses • Alcohol • Increases risk of fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)

  42. FAS • Brains of 6 week old infants No FAS FAS

  43. FAS • Physical Characteristics • Broad, short, flat nose • No dimple above lip • Narrow eyes • Flat face

  44. Practices to AVOID • Illegal Drugs • Marijuana and cocaine can increase risk of: • LBW • Nervous system disorders • Irregular heart rate • Drug withdrawal symptoms in infant • Neonatal death

  45. Practices to AVOID • Over the Counter Medications (most) • Can cause complications during pregnancy and increase risk of birth defects • No aspirin or ibuprofen in the last trimester • Both interfere with blood clotting

  46. Nutrition During Lactation • Energy needs • ~+500 kcal/day for the first 6 months • Maternal weight loss during lactation • Recommend a loss of a maximum of 1-2 pounds/month

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