Pregnant Women Don’t Exercise Enough: Study
Finds Doctors Need to Better Educate Patients
Saint Louis University Research Is Published in a Sports Medicine Journal
ST. LOUIS ? Obstetricians and gynecologists need to do a better job of encouraging
women with uncomplicated pregnancies to exercise, a Saint Louis University School of
Public Health study concludes.
“The message is not getting out that women should continue to exercise during
pregnancy, at least at moderate intensity,” said Terry Leet, Ph.D., a study author and
associate professor of community health at Saint Louis University School of Public Health.
“Only one of every six pregnant women are meeting the current physical activity
recommendation of 30 or more minutes of moderate physical activity on most, if not all, days
of the week.”
The research, funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, was
published in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise.
The findings support a recent newsletter article by Raul Artal, M.D., lead author of
the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology’s 2002 guidelines for exercise during
pregnancy and chair of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Saint Louis
University.
Artal said that not enough of his fellow obstetricians encourage their healthy patients
to exercise during pregnancy.
“The hesitance of obstetricians to recommend exercise to pregnant women is
rooted in old-fashioned notions of pregnancy as a time of confinement,” Artal wrote in
the September issue of Ob.Gyn News, a publication for obstetricians and gynecologists.
Saint Louis University School of Public Health researchers found that pregnant
women were not as physically active as women who were not pregnant. They analyzed data
from more than 150,000 pregnant and non-pregnant women who were interviewed by phone
in 1994, 1996, 1998 and 2000.
Only 16 percent of pregnant women and 27 percent of non-pregnant women were
meeting the current physical activity recommendation in 2000. Further, the percentage of
pregnant women who said they exercised at a moderate or vigorous level was lower in 2000
than in any of the previous years.
Brisk walking for 30 or more minutes at least five days a week is considered
moderate exercise and meets the current physical activity recommendation for pregnant and
non-pregnant women. Leet and his colleagues found that pregnant women who were older,
non-white, unmarried, current smokers, had low incomes or less than 12 years of education
were less likely to exercise than others.
“Overall, this study has vital public health implications that can assist physicians to
identify patients who are at high risk for inactivity during pregnancy,” Leet said.
“These women should be encouraged to begin moderate activities most, if not all
days of the week, as long as medical or obstetric complications do not exist.”
The study found that walking was the most common form of physical activity among
all women surveyed. Other common physical activities were swimming and dance aerobics.
Saint Louis University School of Public Health is one of only 37 fully accredited
schools of public health in the United States and the nation’s only School of Public Health
sponsored by a Jesuit university.
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Editor’s Note: To arrange an interview, call Nancy Solomon, Saint Louis University media
relations, at (314) 977-8017.
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