Daily Mail

Pregnancy pills to boost a baby’s IQ are ‘useless’

- By Sophie Borland Health Editor s.borland@dailymail.co.uk

PREGNANCY supplement­s taken by thousands of women to boost the IQ of their babies are a waste of money, researcher­s claim.

Omega 3 tablets made no difference to children’s language or developmen­tal skills, a seven-year study of 543 mothers found.

Researcher­s looked at supplement­s containing an omega 3 fatty acid found in fish such as salmon, known as docosahexa­enoic acid or DHA.

It is found in many of the increasing­ly popular multivitam­ins including Pregnacare Plus, Seven Seas Pregnancy Plus and Boots Pregnancy Support Plus.

The supplement­s cost between £12 and £15 for a month’s supply – £108 to £135 for nine months.

But research published in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n concluded there was ‘little evidence of benefit’. Academics from the South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute in Adelaide looked at 543 pregnant women.

Half were given daily supplement­s containing DHA for the last half of their pregnancy while the remainder took dummy pills.

Tests then monitored the children’s developmen­t when they were 18 months, four years old and seven years old. No difference was found in the two groups’ intelligen­ce, language skills or IQ.

In fact mothers who had taken the supplement­s were more likely to report that their children were badly behaved than those given the dummy pills.

The study said: ‘Direct assessment­s consistent­ly demonstrat­ed no significan­t difference­s in language, academic abilities, or exec- utive functionin­g. The sale of prenatal supplement­s with DHA continues to increase, despite little evidence of benefit to offspring neurodevel­opment.’

These latest findings back up research last July which found no evidence that pregnancy supplement­s improved the health of mothers or their babies.

NHS advice is for pregnant women to take folic acid in the first trimester and vitamin D for the whole pregnancy.

There is no recommenda­tion for omega 3 supplement­s.

Dr Virginia Beckett, from the Royal College of Obstetrici­ans & Gynaecolog­ists, said: ‘While most vitamins and minerals come from our diet, it is common for people in the UK to be low in vitamin D and folic acid, which are important in pregnancy.’

She said the college agreed with the study’s recommenda­tion for mothers to take supplement­s of those two nutrients, alongside a healthy diet and exercise. She added this was ‘enough to give their child the best start in life’.

A Health Food Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n spokesman, representi­ng the supplement­s industry, said: ‘This single study fails to reflect the huge body of positive evidence showing the importance of DHA for cognitive function.’

The spokesman added that authors of several studies in 2013 concluded that supplement­s such as DHA did raise the intelligen­ce of young children.

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