During Lactation B. NonLactation CASE STUDY APPENDIX A: MyPlate APPENDIX B: MyPlate for Pregnancy and Breastfeeding APPENDIX C: Prenatal Weight Gain Grids for Underweight, Normal Weight, Overweight and Obese Women Pre-pregnancy Underweight Women
Pre-pregnancy Normal Weight Women Pre-pregnancy Overweight Women Pre-pregnancy Obese Women REFERENCES FOR YOUR CONTINUING LEARNING RESOURCES LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS GLOSSARY SELF - ASSESSMENT QUESTIONS ANSWER KEY ABOUT THE AUTHOR ABOUT THE EDITORS
Not exact matches
A
woman being obese (BMI of 30.0 or higher) prior to getting pregnant increased the odds of her child being overweight at age 2 by more than two-fold compared to
women who had a
normal pre-pregnancy weight (BMI between 18.5 and 25), after adjusting for
weight gain during pregnancy, gestational diabetes and breastfeeding.
Women's
pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI) was grouped into those who were underweight, lower -
normal weight, upper -
normal weight, overweight and obese.