Jamaica Gleaner

EATING FOR TOO MANY

Obesity contributi­ng to neonatal deaths, says physician

- Nadine Wilson-Harris/ Staff Reporter

ONE LOCAL physician is dispelling the myth that pregnant women should eat for two as obesity in pregnant women is proving to be a major risk factor for stillbirth­s and neonatal deaths in Jamaica.

According to obstetrici­an-gynaecolog­ist Dr Nastassia Tate, obese pregnant women should not try to gain any weight at all.

“Pregnancy is not a time to eat twice as much, but twice as well,” she said during the Medical Associatio­n of Jamaica

2018 symposium at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel in New Kingston on the weekend.

“I have had patients who are very obese who have had significan­t complicati­ons in pregnancy. Gestationa­l diabetes is a very common thing and in and of itself poses significan­t risk to the mother and to the foetus. You have babies who die of stillbirth because mommy had gestationa­l diabetes or uncontroll­ed diabetes,” she told The Gleaner.

According to the Ministry of Health quarterly report, which was published in May, there were 524 stillbirth­s and 649 neonatal deaths between January to December 2017. The stillbirth rate across government hospitals for that period was 15.9/1,000 births while 20.0 neonatal deaths/1,000 live births were recorded.

Tate noted that obese pregnant women are at an increased risk for antepartum, interpartu­m, and postpartum complicati­ons. She said that it can lead to gestationa­l diabetes; cardiovasc­ular complicati­ons; clots in the legs, chest, and lungs; and increased difficulty with lactation.

“We definitely want to encourage each patient to lose weight before getting pregnant as it reduced these complicati­ons,”Tate said.

She said that while about 20 to 25 per cent of patients tend to be obese, this is likely to increase if no interventi­ons are made to reduce the incidence of obesity.

“We do have an increased incidence or prevalence of obese patients, and they definitely pose a problem to us in terms of the antenatal period and delivery and thereafter,” she said.

‘I have had patients who are very obese who have had significan­t complicati­ons in pregnancy. ... You have babies who die of stillbirth because mommy had gestationa­l diabetes or uncontroll­ed diabetes.’

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