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Guidelines for Physical Activity During Pregnancy: Comparisons From Around the World
Authors
Bandar Al-Judaibi
Ruben Barakat
+13 more
Wendy J. Brown
Bruce C. Carleton
Patricia Dargent-Molina
Kelly R. Evenson
Megumi Haruna
Emily K. Kim
Ellen M. Mikkelsen
Michelle F. Mottola
Katrine M. Owe
Alnoor Ramji
Colin J. Ross
Ute I. Schwarz
Edward Tam
Publication date
1 January 2014
Publisher
Scholarship@Western
Abstract
Introduction. Women attain numerous benefits from physical activity during pregnancy. However, because of physical changes that occur during pregnancy, special precautions are also needed. This review summarizes current guidelines for physical activity among pregnant women worldwide. Methods. We searched PubMed (MedLINE) for country-specific governmental and clinical guidelines on physical activity during pregnancy through the year 2012. We cross-referenced with articles referring to guidelines, with only the most recent included. An abstraction form was used to extract key details and summarize. Results. In total, 11 guidelines were identified from 9 countries (Australia, Canada, Denmark, France, Japan, Norway, Spain, United Kingdom, United States). Most guidelines supported moderate-intensity physical activity during pregnancy (10/11) and indicated specific frequency (9/11) and duration/time (9/11) recommendations. Most guidelines provided advice on initiating an exercise program during pregnancy (10/11). Six guidelines included absolute and relative contraindications to exercise. All guidelines generally ruled-out sports with risks of falls, trauma, or collisions. Six guidelines included indications for stopping exercise during pregnancy. Conclusion. This review contrasted pregnancy-related physical activity guidelines from around the world, and can help inform new guidelines as they are created or updated and facilitate the development of a worldwide guideline. © 2013 The Author(s)
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oai:ir.lib.uwo.ca:paedpub-2988
Last time updated on 08/10/2022