Written By: Gloria Tsang, RD
Title: Founding Registered Dietitian
Alumni: University of British Columbia
Last Updated on:
A healthy diet is crucial to having a healthy pregnancy. Good nutrition is essential to ensuring that a mother’s body can give the unborn baby the nourishment she or he requires to develop and grow.
Table of Contents
Energy requirement varies among individuals. Unfortunately, pregnancy is not the ice-cream-free-for-all as we would like it to be. It is generally recommended that pregnant women increase their daily intake by 100 calories in the first trimester and 300 calories in the second and third trimester. For instance, an extra snack before bedtime consisting of a fruit, a serving of milk or yogurt and a few biscuits is often enough. A daily prenatal multivitamin supplement is often recommended during pregnancy.
Folate, or folic acid, is needed to support the increasing maternal blood volume and to decrease the risk of baby Neural Tube Defects (NTD). Diet alone is not likely to provide enough folate. Therefore, it is recommended that women should start taking a daily folate supplement of 400 mcg (0.4mg) 3 months prior to conception and increase to 600 mcg in the first 3 months of the pregnancy.
Iron is essential to maintaining a sufficient level of blood supply to the growing baby and the placenta. As many women’s iron stores are not enough for meeting the increased requirements during pregnancy, a daily low dose iron supplement (30mg) is often recommended during the second and third trimesters. You can help prevent iron deficiency anemia by eating more iron-rich foods like lean red meat, fish, poultry, dried fruits, whole-grain breads, and iron-fortified cereals.
Your baby gets the calcium necessary for healthy bones and teeth from the mother’s supply. Depending on your age, it is recommended to include 1000mg – 1300mg of calcium and 200IU of Vitamin D in your diet. It means 4 – 6 servings of dairy products or calcium-fortified foods a day. If calcium intake is insufficient during pregnancy, calcium supplements may be needed.
You know that diet and lifestyle choices affect your health and lifespan. But no credible science (only old wives’ tales) has ever shown that diet affects the chances of getting pregnant until 2007 when researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health followed over 17,000 women without a history of infertility for eight years as they tried to become pregnant.
Researchers found that following a “fertility diet” pattern was associated with a lower risk of ovulatory disorder – a major cause of infertility. The results of this study were published in the scientific journal Obstetrics and Gynecology in November 2007 and in the December 10 issue of Newsweek magazine.
Alumni: University of British Columbia – Gloria Tsang is the author of 6 books and the founder of HealthCastle.com, the largest online nutrition network run by registered dietitians. Her work has appeared in major national publications, and she is a regularly featured nutrition expert for media outlets across the country. The Huffington Post named her one of its Top 20 Nutrition Experts on Twitter. Gloria’s articles have appeared on various media such as Reuters, NBC & ABC affiliates, The Chicago Sun-Times, Reader’s Digest Canada, iVillage and USA Today.
calcium, folate, iron, pregnancy, vitamin d