Researchers: Working out while pregnant builds healthier babies

Childhood obesity is becoming an epidemic in America. The percentage of kids affected by obesity has tripled in the last 50 years.

One-third of kids in America are considered overweight or obese, and that is associated with poor motor skill performance and a lower level of physical activity in childhood.

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Researchers at East Carolina University have found something moms-to-be can do to lower their child’s risk of obesity, starting before their child is even born. 

The researchers randomly assigned healthy pregnant women to two groups. One group did moderate to vigorous 50-minute sessions of aerobic exercise three times a week and the other group took part in 50 minutes of stretching and breathing routines three times a week.

Both groups participated from 16 weeks of pregnancy until delivery.

Researchers found that the moms who performed aerobic exercise had infants who had better motor skills at one month. Those infants had better muscular strength and coordination to voluntarily control their heads and extremities.

The researchers suggest that babies who move better early in life will continue to move more and thus are more likely to be physically active throughout childhood, which can lower their risk of obesity.

So, get moving moms-to-be, it doesn’t just keep you healthy, but helps your baby, too. 

Exercising while pregnant has other benefits, too. It can ease your back pain, lower your risk of gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, and cesarean delivery, and helps you lose weight after your baby is born.


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