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Clinic weighs in to aid obese mothers to be



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Published Date:
28 October 2007
SCOTLAND'S first clinic for overweight mothers-to-be is being set up in a bid to cut the death rate among obese pregnant women and their babies.
Patients will be referred to the clinic by midwives and offered advice on diet and lifestyle as well as receiving extra scans and health checks.

Obese mothers account for one third of all pregnancy-related deaths despite making up a quarter of all births. Obese women are more likely to suffer miscarriage, stillbirth and early labour than women whose weight is within the normal healthy range when they are pregnant.

Babies born to obese mothers are more likely to suffer from spina bifida, heart problems and other birth defects as well as being overweight when they are born or later in life, and experts are increasingly worried about the impact of the UK's obesity crisis on the nation's health.

The Metabolic Clinic at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary's Simpson Centre for Reproductive Health will open in February and treat up to 200 women each year who are found to be obese when they visit their midwife for their first pregnancy check at around 10-12 weeks. Midwives will refer women to the service if they have a body mass index of more than 30, for example, a 5ft 4ins tall woman weighing 12 and a half stone.

The clinic has received £400,000 funding from the baby charity Tommy's and a similar amount from Edinburgh University.

The clinic will be run by Andrew Calder, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynaecology and head of reproductive and developmental sciences at Edinburgh University. He said: "There is a lot of interest in obesity but it is not just one single disorder. There are a lot of ramifications.

"Obese women do tend to put on more weight during pregnancy than those who started out as slim.

"They may be offered a sensible eating plan. Diet is a very important subject. It is generally felt that it is not sensible to lose weight while pregnant so it's more about trying to make sure they don't put on too much weight.

"We have got to be very tactful about this because it's very easy for people to feel guilty. But I am not unduly critical of people who are overweight because I can understand how it happens.

"This is not going to give us spectacular results overnight. It's going to be a long haul to get to grips with the real issues."

Usually women see their midwife for antenatal checks every four weeks during pregnancy, and every two weeks as they approach their due date, to check blood pressure, weight, the baby's heartbeat and movements.

Patients at the Metabolic Clinic will attend these regular checks with their own midwife but will also be seen around four times by the specialists at Simpson's for extra checks. These will include scans and checks on the baby as well as checks on the mother such as measurements of their body fat distribution and their waist to hip ratio.

The clinic research team will use the information gained from the patients to monitor the effects of obesity on mothers and babies.

One of the main aims of their research will be to discover exactly why obesity in the mother can cause problems for the baby.

Jonathan Cunnington, director of The Obesity Awareness and Solutions Trust (TOAST), welcomed the initiative.

He said: "This is an important issue and we would support anything that addresses it.

"However if overweight people are encouraged to do something different to those of a healthy weight they might feel upset about that.

"So how it is handled is very important."

Diet advice


Pregnant women are advised to eat healthily from the main food groups: carbohydrates such as bread and pasta; five portions of fruit and vegetables a day; meat, fish and alternative proteins such as eggs, beans and pulses; dairy foods including milk, cheese and yoghurt.

• Foods containing fat and sugar should be kept to a minimum.

• Avoid soft cheeses such as brie, liver, pate, raw and undercooked eggs.

• Eat more foods containing folic acid such as green vegetables, beans, pulses and some fruits including oranges and bananas.

The full article contains 705 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 28 October 2007 12:43 AM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Obesity , Pregnancy and birth
 
1

Charles Linskaill,

Chairman for the 'Babies-Union' 28/10/2007 02:02:50

Andrew Calder, Professor of Obstetrics, WELL-DONE', for not wiping these women of the face of the planet for being overweight and pregnant!
Some people make horrible remarks about women even a little fat, even if not pregnant.
Who are we to judge and be the 'self-righteous' ones?
At the end of the day, these women have a Baby-to-be, on the way, a 'new-life' and Mummy and BaBa need the support and help.
....
"This is not going to give us spectacular results overnight. It's going to be a long haul to get to grips with the real issues."
That certainly IS a key statement!
Breaking the subject slightly, as many of you know, my wife and I have been trying to even get pregnant, for 10years now, my wife suffers from PCOS, she was told at the IVF clinic ERI, to keep fat levels low and she is not even fat!, as this would help her conceive and if you are overweight its unlikely you will conceive!
'Sod's Law' how come these women get pregnant in the first place?
NO Remarks on the obvious please!
Because it not to do with that! its to do with 'fat'
My DYW worries loads, its her fault she cant get pregnant, because she thinks she maybe overweight!
And noway is this the fact!
I feel Soo Sorry for her, when she Say's
"How-come she got pregnant and is fat, when I cant get pregnant?"

2

fife runner,

28/10/2007 07:10:35

so fat is the new thin and being obese is the new fat.

if we keep giving in and spending billions then people will have no incentive to get their weight down. it is obvious just like women who smoke and those who drink they are putting their babies at risk.

I can see in the future the NHS will go bankrupt loking after those who have smoked, drank and eaten themselves ill. The NHS cannot go on like this. Perhaps we will end up with no NHS and a system like USA with private healthcare those who looafter themselves paying less in premiums.

There are consequences for us all, including longer queues on the NHS caused by selfish people.

3

fife runner,

28/10/2007 07:12:33

if the doc thinks they will take up sensible eating he is not in the real world.

4

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 28/10/2007 10:11:31

Charles Linskaill

I sympathise with your plight with regard to you and your wife not being able to conceive but a new technology may come along soon to bless you both with that happy event.

I know its a palliative to say, "Be patient" but after trying for 10 years you have learned patience - and frustration and anger.

5

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 28/10/2007 10:22:01

Not so much "anger" Tim, its more like a deep sadness, more-so for my wife, but one that I as a man , will never know the real truth how it affects her, I call it the 'silent-tears'
But hey! we don't give up and never say never.

6

What a Farce,

Scotland 28/10/2007 23:16:22

Metabolic Clinic??? ROFL. Why not be done with it and call it the fat clinic?

I think this is a major step too far. Obstetricians are currently treating women with a BMI over 30 as a time bomb waiting to explode. Women are being told at their first appointment with a midwife that they need to see an anaesthetist and that it is recommended they have an early epidural - why? because they're higher risk? Yeah, ok, so let's confine them to the bed where they're FAR more likely to end up needing an instrumental delivery or c/section thereby putting them at MUCH higher risk from all the things they were at risk of in the first place - DVT etc. The only reason they are being recommended an early epidural is to make the anaesthetists job easier.

I'm not denying that women who are obese are at greater risk of health problems but why are we treating these women as all having the same risk factors purely by a number on their notes, ie their BMI. You could have a BMI of 30 but have a reasonably good diet and take a reasonable amount of exercise OR you could have a BMI of 28 and smoke 20 fags a day, eat McDonalds for every meal and never get out of your armchair yet the woman who is subjected to the extra scans (why?!) and extra clinic appointments is the one with the number over 30. It is complete madness and a waste of taxpayers money. Although it's easy to see how this nonsense is being sold to women with the dangling carrot of the "extra scans" being held in front of them.


 

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