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Women’s Health Issues
Women’s Health Issues
Plan for a Healthy Pregnancy
To help your pregnancy get off to a good start, take these steps before you get pregnant:
•Get a medical checkup. Discuss your medical history and your family medical history with your doctor.
•Do you have a chronic medical problem, such as asthma, diabetes, or high blood pressure? If so, ask your doctor if changes need to be made in your treatment plan.
•Find out what medicines you can take. Ask which ones you should not take. Tell or show your doctor all prescribed and over-the-counter medicines, vitamins, herbal products, etc. that you take. Ask if you need to change any of these while you try to get pregnant.
•Take a multivitamin that has 400 micrograms of folic acid every day. This B vitamin can help prevent serious birth defects of the brain and spine. Make sure you take folic acid for many months before you get pregnant. Women who have had a baby with a serious problem of the brain or spine should take the amount of folic acid their doctors advise.
•Discuss current and past birth control methods. Ask what you should use until you decide to get pregnant.
•If you or your partner has a family history of sickle-cell disease, Tay-Sachs disease, etc., get genetic counseling. Do this, too, if you are older than age 35 or if your partner is age 60 or older.
•Do you smoke? Do you take street drugs? If so, now is the time to quit. Get help if you need it.
•Stop or limit alcohol use. This will make it easier to go without it when you are pregnant.
•Get vaccines as advised by your doctor.
•Eat healthy foods. This includes:
-Fruits and vegetables.
-Whole-grain breads and cereals.
-Low-fat dairy foods and other calcium-rich foods.
•Get regular exercise.
•If you are overweight, lose weight before you get pregnant.
Healthy moms tend to have healthy babies.
Avoid exposure to X-rays.
Get more information from:
March of Dimes | www.marchofdimes.com
National Women’s Health Information Center | 800.994.9662 | www.womenshealth.gov
Copyright © 2009, American Institute for Preventive Medicine. All rights reserved.