May 2016 Moms

Pregnancy weight gain

Hey guys, I know for each pregnancy its different on how much weight each women has gained. I'm just starting 21 weeks and for th month of december it was ideal to gain a pound a week. I gained 6 pounds this month and my doctor sort of made it a big deal. So so far this pregnancy ive gained 15 pounds. Mind you i am eating healthy and not bingeing out on junk food. Just wondering how everyone else is doing with weight gain?
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Re: Pregnancy weight gain

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  • I had the same news today! 6 pounds in 4 weeks! She also said it could be because of Christmas and normal eating habits will start eventually. But to be honest, I didn't start binging now just because of the holidays. I actually asked her, how much did I gain overall so far? She said 7 pounds. I thought to myself, where is the problem? I actually just started gaining then. I'm 23 weeks and she also said 1 pound per week is normal. I'm not a doctor, but I definitely don't freak out. I know what I'm eating... Maybe I should walk a bit more and use my bike, but other than that, I don't change too much.
  • I gained 6lb in the past 4 weeks too. I know part of it was all the junk I ate, but I lost weight in 1st Tri too. My dr didn't mention anything about my weight to me.

    BabyFruit Ticker
  • @ dshannah  that's really cool. I've never heard that before.

    On one hand, I understand where doctors are coming from because they see many women who gain a lot of weight and never loose it - only to cause health problems down the road.  Last pregnancy, I remember feeling miffed when my doctor said about a 6lb gain in one month, "You won't want to do that every month."  Well, actually that was my goal weight gain per month with twins because I had only recently started gaining at 18 weeks. 
    This pregnancy, in December, I gained 7 lbs and got back to my pre-preg weight at 19 weeks.  I saw a different doctor in the practice, and she didn't mention it. 
    I think it also shouldn't be ignored that gaining weight is sometimes difficult for me mentally.  I was a figure skater growing up. I was around many young women with eating disorders, and though I never developed one, I had to watch my figure and my weight closely.  I'm sure many of you agree that while you want with all your heart to have a healthy pregnancy and baby, it can still be unnerving to watch the numbers on the scale go up.
    I try to look at watching my weight like the rest of the pregnancy stats: blood pressure, urine protein, blood sugar, hemoglobin, etc.
    My goal is to gain 18lbs in the next 18 weeks!  But no matter what the scale says, I want to get to 37 weeks if I can!
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker

    Mama to Three Girls: 
    Twins born March 2014 at 26 weeks due to preterm labor
    and our 37weeker born May 9th, 2016!






  • I'm 21 weeks today and so far have gained 15lbs total. I feel it's too much but my doctor hasn't said anything to me. I know it's different for everyone so it's hard to tell you what's normal for you. Only you and your doctor know that but it doesn't seem like you should be too concerned as long as you're eating healthy.
  • dshannah  Thanks for your feedback.  I totally agree with you on the "I just need to lose the 5 lbs before the wedding/swimming season/vacation/etc" mentality.  I've kept clothes in my closet that don't fit because "someday I will lose those 5-10lbs".  It's crazy that my body doesn't look as "good" as it did before I had kids, yet I appreciate it so much more!

    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker

    Mama to Three Girls: 
    Twins born March 2014 at 26 weeks due to preterm labor
    and our 37weeker born May 9th, 2016!






  • My weight gain has been all over the place - one month I gained 10 lbs and then the next month I gained 0. I feel like if I'm eating good food when I'm hungry and staying moderately active, my body will do what it needs to do.
  • KaKipKaKip member
    edited January 2016
    @dshannah, I completely agree with you! We have such a pathological relationship with food and weight in this country.I'm firmly convinced the more we obsess about weight, the unhealthier we get. Because we should be thinking about our overall physical and mental health. Getting moving, getting stronger, getting more limber--- all that feels good. If I am remember the survey you cited correctly (or perhaps it was another) the most detrimental thing for one's health outcomes was not obesity but rather inactivity. And the study found inactivity was most dangerous among thinner folks. Anyways, shaming someone never improves their health, right? I think the Op's doctor was being ridiculous! 
  • I've gained about 20 pounds so far and I'm 20 weeks.  I've learned through my previous pregnancies that I need to gain a lot to support myself while I'm breastfeeding.  With both of my children I was a practically a skeleton after 6 months of nursing so my body instinctively knows when to pack on the pounds I guess.  I eat until I'm full and although I don't exercise in the traditional way I almost never sit down since I'm chasing my kids all day.  I believe you should listen to your body and gain weight accordingly. 
  • Glad to see others have been gaining more recently! I didn't gain anything in the first trimester, but have bumped up 10-13 pounds (depending on the day) over the past ten weeks- mainly in 3-5 pound increments. I haven't been eating any differently, so it's been a little scary to watch. My goal was to only gain 15-20 pounds for the entire pregnancy because I am obese (15 pounds over the overweight mark pre pregnancy), but thankfully my doctor doesn't seem to have issues with me gaining closer to the normal average of 30ish.
  • I'm 21 weeks and I've gained 20 lbs and I'm having twins. With my other two kids I gained around 28 lbs total so I'm definitely on track to gain more than that this time.
  • My doctor has not mentioned weight to me at all. I am 21 weeks and have gained about 10lbs total for the pregnancy.
  • I feel weird.  I have not gained a pound,  I've actually lost several (was NOT trying to).  Started out at 233 and now I am down to 219.  Probably from having to eat healthier or something of that nature.  My doctor is not worried though.


    First Pregnancy
    • BFP: 01/25/2015
    • EDD: 09/28/2015
    • Incomplete MC: 02/28/2015

    Second Pregnancy

    • BFP: 09/11/2015
    • EDD: 05/25/2016
    Baby Born
    04/15/2016



    PGAL
  • I am 22 weeks this week and I have only gained 5 lbs. which my doctor is totally okay with since my little man is growing extremely well. And I was overweight before I got pregnant.
  • I'm at 22 weeks/six months and I've gained 23 pounds. I asked my midwife today if it was an appropriate amount. She said it was fine, I was maybe at the higher end of weight gain for end of second trimester, but since my body looked fine (I just look like I'm a regular person wearing a fake bump) and I started at a healthy weight (5 feet 5 inches and 135 pounds) and I had a healthy diet, they weren't worried. She said they look at a lot of factors, not just the number on the scale, to determine if your weight gain is appropriate.
  • As of my appt at 21 weeks, last week, I had gained 17lbs. I felt I had gained more. I was happy to hear it wasnt 30, because i felt like it was. My Dr said she didn't mention it because she was fine with the way it was steadily adding. I never had morning sickness, and I have no thyroid. She said I was doing great considering the lack of thyroid and that we've upped my medication 4 times to combat the post surgical hypothyroidism. She mentioned how hard it is to grow a baby without a thyroid. My husband and I worked our butts off to get the ok to start trying. We waited years to make sure I was healthy enough to conceive, and have a child without many complications. I know the Dr has our best interest in mind, and is just happy to see us successful without heartache. We are truly blessed.
    She said she would become more concerned and lock it in if I fail my glucose test at 28 weeks.
    Weight is just a number, and how you feel is what is most important. Growing a healthy baby is hard work!
  • I was just told today: good news! You're just one pound less than your pre preg weight. I honestly was scared I didn't with enough, but I had a really bad uti back during week 8 and was but on macrobid that after the fact we found out I was allergic to so I lost 7 pounds during that 10 days so technically I am gaining weight... I'm just glad she wasn't worried.
  • My OB keeps stressing the importance of only gaining 25-35 lbs to avoid any complications. She said that I'm towards the upper end at my 22 week check in. I feel like I'm having a growth spurt this past month. I only gained a few libs until about 18 weeks. Since then It's a lb per week. I'm up 13 lbs at 24 weeks. I started out in the normal BMI range. I'm worried that at this rate I'll gain too much. I try to eat well and balanced but I'm not restricting myself.   
  • I'll very likely be up 13 pounds at 24 weeks too (today is 23w5d, and I'm fluctuating between 12 and 13 pounds' total gain day by day, so I figure by the end of the week the higher number will be more steady), and as far as I can tell that's completely normal. I certainly can't think of any reason your doctor should be giving you a hard time about that level of weight gain.

    I also had a major increase in weight gain over the past few weeks (approx. 4 pounds in 3 weeks, which represents a significant spike over my previous rate). I'm fairly certain it's a combination of water weight and the baby hitting a growth spurt -- the baby movements have gotten much, much bigger/stronger over the past two weeks (went from barely perceptible to me at 21w, to being strong enough for my husband to feel at 22w, to being strong enough to shift a blanket laid over my lap at 23w). I know it can't be fat since I've been tracking calories in/calories out since the beginning of this whole thing, and it's mathematically impossible for that to be fat.

    Anyway, what I'm basically trying to say is (1) you're not the only one to hit a spike in weight gain at this point, and IMO that is not weird or abnormal in any way; and (2) 13 pounds does not strike me as a worrisome weight gain at this point in the process.

    I would be pretty annoyed if my doctor made a big thing out of that.
  • I somehow managed to plop on 25 lbs by week 23. I was actually concerned as I really didn't know what is an appropriate amount. All my OB said that people put weight on differently and joked that most of it appeared to be going to my breasts anyway. I also blame the holidays . . . 

    I did drop 4 lbs though between that appointment and week 25 so I guess things are balancing out. I've been out walking a lot more and eating a lot more fruits and veggies. I feel like I am getting back to my regular pre-pregnancy routines and foods so I think that is helping things along. 
  • TunieBeeTunieBee member
    edited January 2016
    @vinerie

    I actually totally agree with you. I am also not into body shaming pregnant women, most women do gain more than the recommended 25-35 pounds and still have a healthy pregnancies and babies. Also, 13 pounds at week 24 doesn't seem excessive. Assuming you gain a pound a week for the rest of your pregnancy, you would be 31 pounds total. However, we absolutely know extra weight is linked to major pregnancy complications, and increased morbidity and mortality of both mom and baby including preeclampsia (and it's nasty cousin HELLP), GD, pre-term labor, c-sections and all the increased risks and complications of c-sections as well as numerous other issues. Weight is absolutely a metric of a healthy pregnancy. (And I'm 5'2" and gained 40 my last pregnancy so I'm no saint myself). In my professional and personal opinion, it would be irresponsible bordering on negligent not to have a discussion about healthy weight with a pregnant patient.




  • It's crazy how many things we have to worry about during pregnancy. Gaining too much? That's bad. Gaining too little? That's bad too. I've only gained about 5 pounds so far (and I have been eating) and this worries me. Granted, I started this pregnancy with a BMI that teetered just barely above 25, which means I'm only supposed to gain between 15-25 pounds. Still, I just hate the amount of stress that this weight issue causes. It makes me want a drink... :) 
  • Yeah, @tunibee I am no saint, either! I should add that my post is not in response to any person's worries about weight on this thread. I'm no MD. I have no idea about anyone's weight gain and of course people *do* gain differently, which is probably why there are many metrics on which to measure health and healthy pregnancy weight gain. 
    Me: 38; DH: 41
    DS: Born 5-17-16 

  • I agree with you @vinerie! I was actually looking up weight gain studies in pregnant women last night and some of the associations and risks that they've linked to too much weight gain as well as too little weight gain is really interesting! I think some women naturally gain more and some naturally gain less, but completely ignoring weight gain during pregnancy would be irresponsible of the doctor.
  • dshannah said:
    JennyS86 said:

    On one hand, I understand where doctors are coming from because they see many women who gain a lot of weight and never loose it - only to cause health problems down the road.
    See, actually, being overweight does not cause health problems: in fact, those who are slightly overweight have better immune systems and longer lifespans in longitudinal studies than people who have less "excess" body weight.  And many of the joint issues you see are results of not having the musculature to carry the burden of the fat, and this tends to occur when there is an underlying injury (i.e. not caused by fat) or when fat people are shamed into not exercising.

    There are some hormonal consequences to carrying around extra fat, but they are negligible once you've hit puberty and if you're not genetically inclined to breast cancer.

    The only quantifiable negative health consequences from fat come from fat stigma--i.e. people are stressed and depressed and marginalized and avoid doctors because they are fat and constantly shamed for it, and so their health declines.

    And to get to the point where doctors start being unable to care for us because we don't fit their equipment (though they seem to have no trouble accommodating NFL players), we'd have to be upwards of 400lbs. The two pounds (total 20 extra pounds if you're over every month!) your doctor is complaining about is nothing, and it's absurd that she is harassing you about it.

    How many times has any of us put off a major life change until we've lost those extra 5 pounds? When I was a little girl I was afraid to go swimming because I didn't want anyone to think I was fat, and I gave up gymnastics when another girl made fun of my thighs. I read just this morning about a woman who put off going to med school until she'd lost 50 lbs! 

    Such BS that we are all put through, as the rest of your post shows:
    I think it also shouldn't be ignored that gaining weight is sometimes difficult for me mentally.  I was a figure skater growing up. I was around many young women with eating disorders, and though I never developed one, I had to watch my figure and my weight closely.  I'm sure many of you agree that while you want with all your heart to have a healthy pregnancy and baby, it can still be unnerving to watch the numbers on the scale go up.
    Even when we are *supposed* to be gaining weight, we are afraid to because society tells us we are less valuable if we are larger.

    Since when is it a bad thing to take up space?

    And, as I've said before, there is no way to hate yourself healthy.

    Updating because this showed up in the NYTimes today:
    https://mobile.nytimes.com/2013/01/03/opinion/our-imaginary-weight-problem.html?smid=fb-share&referer=http%3A%2F%2Fm.facebook.com%2F&_r=0
    I'm not addressing everything in your post, but as a medical imaging professional I need to address this point. Yes weight is only one measure. but very few 400+lb people are NFL players, where most of their weight is muscle. 

    Its not just the ability to be on equipment which can only accommodate up to say 400lb, it's the fact that many overweight people physically CANNOT FIT inside an MRI or CT scanner. The bores are only able to be so wide, or you can't get a picture. it's not that they refuse to make them bigger, it's because the laws of physics won't allow them any bigger and still work. Yes there are large bore MRI's and CT's but they are virtually at their limit and the image quality is greatly reduced. 

    I have had to say no to imaging patients because the equipment simply is not able to image through the amount of tissue they have. Or if I did, the image would be so degraded, there is no diagnostic quality to the images. This is an issue across ALL medical imaging fields. And it's got nothing to do with the actual "weight" of the patient per se, but their girth. Because an NRL player is very lean they are lovely to image, and you get good diagnostic images. Someone of the same "weight" but not made of muscle, not as easy. 

    I'm not saying that "weight" is everything, but carrying a lot of extra fat is not healthy. There is larger and "larger". If you are too big to fit into an MRI machine, then yes I believe you are getting toward the unhealthy side of larger. 

    And before anyone attacks me, I'm 5'4" and almost 200lb. I do think that as a society we think too much about looks, and like anything there is a fine line between healthy and unhealthy. 
    Angel baby June 2013, DD born 22 April 2014, BFP 10 Sept 2015 - Due 22 May 2016
  • @vinerie I do absolutely respect their expertise :)  But! Sometimes the experts (even us professors) are so blinded by societal trends that they/we allow their/our assumptions to go unchecked.  Most of the current medical literature shows not the dangers of not talking to obese patients about their weight, but of doctors stigmatizing their overweight patients (and their female patients--omg did you see that piece in the Times on how doctors discount women's pain?) and not treating them for the issues they have.

    So if a doctor is focused on weight rather than on those other, more accurate and telling measures of health, I'm going to question their credibility, yes.  Just as all of us academics should distrust work that seems to be operating under faulty assumptions.  Academics aren't always right; neither are doctors. 

    And just to be clear, I'm not advocating universal distrust of the medical profession, anti-vaxxer style. But the research consensus on weight (not the fringe, and excluding studies funded by the diet industry) is that it is not just a red herring, it's worse: doctors' biases against fat people and against weight gain actively prevent them from treating fat patients well. 

    @avidkeo: Absolutely!  My point was not that being 400-lbs is not a problem for medical equipment, but that the teams of doctors and trainers who care for NFL players have access to that equipment while the majority of Americans don't. Why is it that many gurneys have a 350-lb limit when so many Americans are beyond that weight? What are they supposed to do when they get sick? We have the technology, we just choose not to use it/pay for the upgrades.  And yes, those machines and tools are expensive, but so are the consequences of misdiagnosis and shoddy care.

    And, finally, @JessicaB0627 -- There is, absolutely, a correlation between all those complications and obesity.  But correlation does not imply causation. And often the causation goes the other way: we gain weight because of the absorbtion and regulatory issues that arise with pregnancy and its concomitant hormonal changes. For example, gestational diabetes can cause weight gain. So the thing to check for is not weight gain, but glucose tolerance.  Weight gain might be a signal, but why point to that when we're getting our blood and urine checked every time we see the doctor?

    When we focus on weight and not those other markers of health, what we get is this thread: countless pregnant women who are freaking out about gaining an extra few pounds when in fact they are perfectly healthy and should be trying to keep their stress levels down and should under no circumstances be trying to lose weight while they are carrying a child.
  • @vinerie I think pregnancy being different is a good enough reason to get annoyed with doctors who focus on weight. It is much less about weight gain, and more so about nutrition. If a doctor is concerned, they should have a patient keep a log of what they eat. If it's well balanced with plenty of protein and nutrient rich foods, they know everything is fine. If not, they should have a nutrition discussion, NOT a weight discussion. A woman concerned about weight gain and not getting enough nutrients based on that fear is way worse than a woman who is getting enough and gaining more than the normal recommended amount. It isn't about weight at all, and doctors should not frame it as such.
    *Siggy Warning*
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  • @vinerie I think pregnancy being different is a good enough reason to get annoyed with doctors who focus on weight. It is much less about weight gain, and more so about nutrition. If a doctor is concerned, they should have a patient keep a log of what they eat. If it's well balanced with plenty of protein and nutrient rich foods, they know everything is fine. If not, they should have a nutrition discussion, NOT a weight discussion. A woman concerned about weight gain and not getting enough nutrients based on that fear is way worse than a woman who is getting enough and gaining more than the normal recommended amount. It isn't about weight at all, and doctors should not frame it as such.
    Totally agree. I just don't think in general that health professionals talking with patients about weight is a form of body shaming. 
    Me: 38; DH: 41
    DS: Born 5-17-16 

  • @dshannah  I think you missed my point a wee bit which is that NFL players don't need that equipment because they fit into standard sized equipment. And the cost of a large bore MRI is many hundreds of thousands of dollars more, you aren't talking about a small amount of money here. Equally with gurneys that are able to hold the greater weight, its not hundreds, but thousands of dollars difference. You talk about choosing not to pay for the upgrades. who is expected to pay? If you require every single hospital to have bariatric equipment, some one will have to pay for that. Wont that increase your insurance costs dramatically? (not american so don't know how that works)

    I agree that we don't need to stress out pregnant women about the amount of weight they gain, and that no woman should be made to feel they should loose weight while pregnant. I also agree at the end of the day its about being healthy. But to say that extra weight over a certain point is not unhealthy, and comparing a 400lb lay person to a 400lb NFL player is unrealistic. 
    Angel baby June 2013, DD born 22 April 2014, BFP 10 Sept 2015 - Due 22 May 2016
  • @dshannah I agree with a couple things you said. Yes, gaining weight could be a side effect of GD, however, if you are diagnosed with GD you are strongly encouraged to maintain a very healthy diet and keep your weight gain within a healthy range to give your baby the best opportunity to be healthy and be unaffected by the GD. So although it can cause weight gain, even under those circumstances you are encouraged to still not gain an excessive amount of weight. You say that some people are blinded by societal trends. While I do think that is true in some cases, I also think it can go the other way as well. I think some people are so hell-bent on NOT accepting things because they think they are a "societal trend". It's a really fine line and I think both directions can be harmful. A lot of the pregnancy culture right now tends to lean towards "natural births" and I think that can be physically and emotionally harmful to a lot of women. People are becoming ridiculously untrusting of doctors, so they believe doctors only make decisions for their own convenience, while most doctors generally care about the health of their patients and only make decisions in the patient's best interest. For instance, The Business of Being Born basically preaches to viewers that doctors are evil and don't care about your health. So instead of accepting the doctor's decisions, they are questioning them and potentially making poor decisions for their health just in spite of "societal trends". And then when women really need c-sections or inductions they are made to feel incompetent because they didn't go the "natural way". I also think the Internet makes people believe that they are more competent in making health-related decisions than their doctor because they can google whatever they want. Basically what I'm getting at is, most doctors probably have a better reason to mention weight to their patient's than because they feel like calling someone fat that day. They WANT us to be healthy and our babies to be healthy. You also said that Academics aren't always right. I'm not sure how aware you are of the procedures and standards that go into publishing papers and experiments in the science and medical world. These scientists and doctors spend years of their lives dedicated to a single cause. Getting funding for an experiment alone could take years. It's not a bunch of random people doing fake studies and putting in a scientific journal. They must prove their credibility over and over again, show extensive evidence in favor of their results, and then wait a decent amount of time will other professionals in their field peer-review their articles. So yeah, I do actually trust the research that's been done.
    Well said! especially the research information. Try citing something un-peer reviewed in any type of formal study and see what happens. 
    Angel baby June 2013, DD born 22 April 2014, BFP 10 Sept 2015 - Due 22 May 2016
  • @dshannah I agree with a couple things you said. Yes, gaining weight could be a side effect of GD, however, if you are diagnosed with GD you are strongly encouraged to maintain a very healthy diet and keep your weight gain within a healthy range to give your baby the best opportunity to be healthy and be unaffected by the GD. So although it can cause weight gain, even under those circumstances you are encouraged to still not gain an excessive amount of weight. You say that some people are blinded by societal trends. While I do think that is true in some cases, I also think it can go the other way as well. I think some people are so hell-bent on NOT accepting things because they think they are a "societal trend". It's a really fine line and I think both directions can be harmful. A lot of the pregnancy culture right now tends to lean towards "natural births" and I think that can be physically and emotionally harmful to a lot of women. People are becoming ridiculously untrusting of doctors, so they believe doctors only make decisions for their own convenience, while most doctors generally care about the health of their patients and only make decisions in the patient's best interest. For instance, The Business of Being Born basically preaches to viewers that doctors are evil and don't care about your health. So instead of accepting the doctor's decisions, they are questioning them and potentially making poor decisions for their health just in spite of "societal trends". And then when women really need c-sections or inductions they are made to feel incompetent because they didn't go the "natural way". I also think the Internet makes people believe that they are more competent in making health-related decisions than their doctor because they can google whatever they want. Basically what I'm getting at is, most doctors probably have a better reason to mention weight to their patient's than because they feel like calling someone fat that day. They WANT us to be healthy and our babies to be healthy. You also said that Academics aren't always right. I'm not sure how aware you are of the procedures and standards that go into publishing papers and experiments in the science and medical world. These scientists and doctors spend years of their lives dedicated to a single cause. Getting funding for an experiment alone could take years. It's not a bunch of random people doing fake studies and putting in a scientific journal. They must prove their credibility over and over again, show extensive evidence in favor of their results, and then wait a decent amount of time will other professionals in their field peer-review their articles. So yeah, I do actually trust the research that's been done.
    Hi @JessicaB0627 --The reason I mentioned academics (in reference to @vinerie's post) is that both she and I *are* academics:)  And in fact I have gone through the peer-review process multiple times. (Yes, I'm bragging, but it's a big deal!) It's hella difficult, and hella rigorous. But.  It doesn't stop a lot of sh*t from getting published. And it doesn't mean that all good work gets published. Even when the peer-review is double-blind (which it isn't always) people still have their biases. Because peer review is done by (you guessed it) peers.

    Indeed, I actually worked as an editorial assistant at the top journal in my field and I witnessed how terrible things get published.  Sometimes it's because the field is so small and the topic so particular that everyone knows who writes what without ever seeing the names.  Sometimes it's because the majority of the editorial board is of one mind about a certain topic (don't want to reveal too much about my field but there are "orthodoxies" in every discipline that get challenged by up and coming scholars, and the old guard does not like to let them in). Sometimes excellent pieces do not get accepted because the author has not cited the reviewer (who was tangentially relevant), or for some other reason related to vanity. Which is all to say that I know what I'm talking about here:) Peer review is the best indication that something is deemed acceptable by experts, but it is not by any stretch of the imagination an infallible process.  

    I am not suggesting that we demonize our doctors or disregard everything they have to tell us. But (to use an academic analogy) even the best academic articles have points with which an informed and intelligent reader will (hopefully respectfully) disagree, or at least points which can stand clarification.

    But when we know that doctors have been disciplined by their own governing bodies (the AMA as well as various specialty groups) for placing too much emphasis on weight, when these professional organizations and the med schools have all warned their members about not making assumptions based on weight (most notably the assumption that fat patients are "non-compliant"), it's totally worthwhile to ask ourselves if our doctors are operating under that same misapprehension.

    And, to your point about gestational diabetes: As you yourself say, GD should be an occasion for a doctor to inquire after your eating habits and to monitor those. But that has nothing to do with how much you weigh! If you are eating exactly the right things and you are still gaining weight, that is not in itself cause for concern. You can be/get quite fat by eating reasonable amounts of very healthy food. Because environmental factors, hormonal factors, and biological differences in metabolisms make it that way.









  • @dshannah I have to disagree with your statement: " But that has nothing to do with how much you weigh! If you are eating exactly the right things and you are still gaining weight, that is not in itself cause for concern." I'm not an "academic" but am someone who wishes this mentality was erased. I gained an enormous amount of weight with my first even though I was working out and eating the exact right things. No one batted an eye at me and I almost died. Turns out I have a disease that caused my extreme weight gain with my pg and had any medical personnel questioned a bit further or been concerned it wouldn't have gotten so out of control.
    image
    Been married since 2009.
    Unicornuate Uterus (yes I menstruate glitter)
    Several MCs
    DD born 2013 (our miracle "you can't have babies" baby!)



  • @dshannah are you arguing that obesity isn't a health problem? I think it has been pretty well proven that obesity causes numerous serious health conditions including diabetes and heart disease.
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