University of Wollongong
Browse

Australian pregnant women's awareness of gestational weight gain and dietary guidelines: opportunity for action

Download (1.42 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 01:46 authored by Khlood Bookari, Heather Yeatman, Moira Williamson
Background. Excessive gestational weight gain (GWG) can negatively impact on maternal and foetal health. Guidelines based on Institute of Medicine (IOM) encourage managing GWG by following healthy eating recommendations and increasing physical activity. This study investigated pregnant women’s knowledge of their optimal GWG and recommended dietary approaches for GWGmanagement. Method. English-speaking pregnant women were recruited from five hospitals in New SouthWales (Australia) and an online link. Prepregnancy Body Mass Index (BMI) was calculated from self-reported height and prepregnancy weight. Participants identified their recommended GWG. A survey assessed practical dietary knowledge and asked about broad dietary recommendations to prevent excessive GWG. Chi square and logistic regression analyses were used. Results. 𝑁 = 326 pregnant women completed the surveys; 49% entered pregnancy overweight (25.2%) or obese (23.6%); and knowledge of recommended GWG was lacking. Prepregnancy BMI was a significant predictor of GWG recommendation knowledge (𝑃 < 0.000). Pregnant women were highly knowledgeable about broad dietary recommendations but had poor knowledge of detailed recommendations. Conclusions. Limited knowledge of IOM’s GWG guidelines and of specific dietary recommendations for pregnancy should be addressed by health care providers and education initiatives to assist the high number of women who enter pregnancy overweight or obese.

History

Citation

Bookari, K., Yeatman, H. & Williamson, M. (2016). Australian pregnant women's awareness of gestational weight gain and dietary guidelines: opportunity for action. Journal of Pregnancy, 2016 8162645-1-8162645-9.

Journal title

Journal of Pregnancy

Volume

2016

Language

English

Notes

This article has a corrigendum available at https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/9372040

RIS ID

104833

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC