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Bed Rest: An Expectant Mom's Survival Guide

Staying Healthy & Productive
-- By Antigone Arthur, Health & Pregnancy Author

Your nine-month venture leading to parenthood will inevitably entail a variety of bumps in the road, even if you have sailed through a prior pregnancy with flying colors. One unexpected hurdle that as many as one in five women face during pregnancy is a requirement for bed rest.

Each year, health care professionals will prescribe bed rest to more than half a million expectant mothers. A doctor may recommend bed rest in response to a medical condition or symptom that puts the health of the baby and/or mother at high risk - multiple pregnancies, high blood pressure (hypertension), pre-eclampsia, gestational diabetes, vaginal bleeding, and premature labor, for example.

Positive Effects of Bed Rest
Bed rest has been shown to alleviate symptoms and reduce risk for complications. Established benefits include:
  • Decreasing physical and emotional stress
  • Lower blood pressure
  • Reduction in vaginal bleeding
  • Restriction of premature contractions
  • Facilitation of blood flow to the placenta
Because each pregnancy and every woman is unique, your experience with bed rest may vary; some women are placed on bed rest early on and then released, whereas others spend what seems like their entire pregnancies in bed.

Get Specifics
It is important that you discuss both the specific details and the exact requirements of your bed rest with your health care provider. Some cases require stringent adherence, but milder conditions may allow for a little more flexibility.

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Member Comments About this Article
"This is a follow-up post. I posted on this bedrest article on Sept. 29 of 2008. I had been on hospital bedrest for 1 month at that time (plus 3 weeks bedrest at home prior to that). I started bleeding at 15 weeks, and my water broke at 18 weeks. (PPROM). Once my water broke on Aug. 29, I was immediately admitted to the hospital. The doctors basically were waiting for me to either go into labor, or for infection to set in. In either case they expected me to lose my baby. There are, howeve..." -- DMS1971
"My daughter is at the end of her first week on bed rest. She has a very low amniotic fluid level. She is almost 34 weeks. This is her first full term pregnancy at age 32. She had 4 early miscarriages before this baby. The baby is a boy, his name is Jace. She is hospitalized until she delivers. While it is difficult for her to just lie there growing the baby, she is normally a very energetic busy woman, she is simply glowing from happiness that she is this far along and the baby is responding w..." -- GRANNYSHESHE
"I was on bed rest the last two months due to GD. I was on insulin, a strict diet, I saw a nutritionist and a specialist, and my blood sugar stayed high. They tried to keep me in the hospital, but I refused and said I would leave my job and stay at home. I only worked as long as I did because I had a desk job. Now that we're trying for our second, we know there is a chance I will get GD again, and we're preparing ourselves for it. I'm going to take classes online and I'm going to learn a second ..." -- MCCMURPHY
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About The Author
Antigone Arthur
Antigone is a freelance writer and proud mother. She has been researching and writing about pregnancy, breastfeeding, infertility and alternative health solutions for more than a decade.
Antigone Arthur

 


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