The Scotsman

Figures show 56.9% of women giving birth either overweight or obese

- By KATRINE BUSSEY

A record proportion of women giving birth last year were either overweight or obese, new figures have shown.

National Records of Scotland recorded a total of 48,430 live births across Scotland in 202122.

But of those woman giving birth, just two fifths (40.9 per cent) were classed as having a healthy body mass index (BMI) – with 56.9 per cent either overweight or obese.

Public Health Scotland said that the figures showed "maternal obesity continued to increase" and that this total was the "highest since reporting began".

As well as the 29.6 per cent of women giving birth who were overweight and the 27.3 percent who were obese, there were also 2.3 percent who were classed as being underweigh­t.

The figures also showed the continuing trend for women to have babies later in life in 202122.

Almost a quarter (24.7 per cent) of women giving birth – regardless of whether the child was their first baby or not–were aged 35 or older.

Meanwhile, the proportion of women who gave birth under the age of 20 fell to its lowest recorded total–with just 2.3 percent of births involving women in this age group.

Births by Caesarean sections continued to increase, with a record 37.6 per cent of infants delivered this way in pregnancie­s where there was only one baby.

Almost a quarter (23.5 per cent) of women under 20 giving birth delivered their baby by Caesarean section in 202122, with this proportion rising to more than half (55.4 percent) of women aged 40 and over.

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