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Healthy Lifestyles During Pregnancy Leads to Lower Risk of Diabetes
A new study indicates that pregnant women who maintain total healthy lifestyles, namely eat well, stay physically active, have low stress and don’t smoke, are nearly four and a half times less likely to have gestational diabetes.
Published online in the American Journal of Epidemiology, the study by researchers at the University of Washington (UW) School of Public Health looked at the lifestyle behaviors of 3,005 pregnant women in Washington state of U.S. Pacific Northwest. Overall, 20 percent of the women kept a healthy diet, 66 percent were physically active, 95 percent were non-smokers and 55 percent had low stress.
“Our study results suggest that a lifestyle during pregnancy including multiple healthy behaviors can be beneficial for preventing gestational diabetes,” lead author Sylvia Badon, who conducted the research as part of her doctoral program in the Department of Epidemiology, was quoted as saying in a news release from the school on Thursday.
More than 200,000 women in the United States every year are affected by gestational diabetes mellitus, a common pregnancy complication that causes high blood sugar. Women who develop gestational diabetes are at higher risk of developing type 2 diabetes later in life. Children exposed in utero are at higher risk of macrosomia at birth, or being significantly larger than average, and of obesity and type 2 diabetes in childhood and adulthood.
In the UW study, participants were asked about the type and frequency of their physical activities, including walking, swimming, dancing, hiking and yoga; and about their diet over a three-month period, smoking history and status, and handling of stressful and emotional situations. A numerical value was given to each woman’s answer, with one reflecting a healthy response and zero reflecting an unhealthy response.
Numerical values for each lifestyle behavior were added and each woman was given a total healthy lifestyle score, ranging from zero to four. When women were tested for gestational diabetes at 24 to 28 weeks pregnant, 140 women were positively diagnosed.
Data were collected as part of the Omega Study, a prospective pregnancy cohort study designed to assess dietary risk factors for pregnancy complications. Participants received prenatal care at clinics associated with Swedish Medical Center and Tacoma General Hospital from 1996 to 2008.
Results showed that each one-point increase in a woman’s lifestyle score was associated with a 21 percent lower risk of gestational diabetes. Women with a lifestyle score of 0 were 4.43 times more likely to have gestational diabetes than women with a lifestyle score of 4. Women with a score of 4 were 35 percent less likely to have gestational diabetes than women with a score of 3 or less.
“Public health and clinical recommendations and interventions targeting multiple components of healthy lifestyle during pregnancy may be more effective in preventing gestational diabetes than approaches focused on a single healthy behavior,” noted Badon. (Xinhua)