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New pregnancy guidelines bad news for obese womenObese pregnant women can gain some weight, but not muchDocs should monitor weight gain before, during, after pregnancyNew guidelines call for research on pregnancy weight gainBy Maggie Fox, Health and Science EditorWASHINGTON, May 28 (Reuters) - Obese women can safely gain just a small amount of weight when pregnant, but doctors need to do more to help women stay slim before they get pregnant, U.S. policy advisers said on Thursday.

New pregnancy guidelines bad news for obese women

Obese pregnant women can gain some weight, but not much

Docs should monitor weight gain before, during, after pregnancy

New guidelines call for research on pregnancy weight gain

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

WASHINGTON, May 28 (Reuters) - Obese women can safely gain just a small amount of weight when pregnant, but doctors need to do more to help women stay slim before they get pregnant, U.S. policy advisers said on Thursday.

Women who are obese should gain about 11 to 20 pounds (5 to 9 kg) while pregnant, the Institute of Medicine and the National Research Council panel said in new guidelines.

"It had become clear that heavier women could gain less weight and still deliver an infant of good size," the report said.

With two-thirds of the population overweight or obese, the panel said, it is clear that new pregnancy guidelines must be geared toward heavier women.

"In our population today, more women of reproductive age are severely obese (8 percent) than are underweight (3 percent) and their short- and long-term health has become a concern, in addition to the size of the infant at birth," the report reads.

Women of healthy weight or who are slightly overweight can gain the standard recommended amounts, said Kathleen Rasmussen, professor of nutrition at Cornell University in New York, who chaired the committee that wrote the report.

Healthy women of normal body mass index or BMI -- a measure of height to weight -- should gain 25 to 35 pounds (11 to 16 kg) during pregnancy, the same as recommended when the guidelines were last updated in 1990.

Overweight women should gain 15 to 25 pounds (6.8 to 11 kg). BMI is accepted globally as a good measure of whether someone is overweight. A 5-foot-6-inch (167 cm) woman weighing between 115 and 154 pounds (52 and 70 kg) has a normal BMI, according to an online calculator at http://www.nhlbisupport.com/bmi/.

BODY MASS INDEX

A BMI of over 25 is considered overweight, while a BMI of 30 or more -- reflecting 33 percent or more body fat -- makes a person obese.

The report said doctors should record a woman's weight, height, and BMI routinely before conception, throughout pregnancy and after.

Women who gain too much weight while pregnant not only risk keeping that weight after they have the baby, but also have higher rates of some pregnancy complications, including high blood pressure and gestational diabetes.

"Preeclampsia is about twice as prevalent among overweight, and about three times as prevalent among obese women, as it is among normal weight women," the report said. This dangerous condition can kill a pregnant woman. The World Health Organization estimates it kills 500,000 babies a year globally.

"More women are already obese when they become pregnant. Based on data from the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System, one-fifth of American women are obese at the start of pregnancy, a figure that has risen 70 percent in the last decade," the report reads.

Overweight and obese women may also endanger the baby by trying to diet while pregnant. "About half of reproductive-aged American women are trying to lose weight, and another one-third of pregnant women may be attempting to maintain their weight," the report reads. "The prevalence of attempted weight loss during pregnancy doubled in the past 20 years."

But, the report said, there is little research into the long-term consequences of gaining too much weight while pregnant and recommended that more such studies be done.

REUTERS