What to eat during pregnancy

If you are looking for advice on what to eat during pregnancy Dr Harriet Holme, who runs Healthy Eating DR, a leading private nutrition clinic, is the perfect sounding board.  Not only is the author of Eating During Pregnancy and Postpartum Nutrition, but she is also a Mumma to two gorgeous small people.  This lady has walked the walk and can most definitely talk the talk; she has more letters after her name than there are in the alphabet. @healthyeatingdr

We asked her What to eat during pregnancy and here’s what she had to say;

“For many women, pregnancy can be a time which focuses their mind on what they are eating. With so much conflicting information available online, it can also be difficult to sift the fact from fiction.

In a recent study, 90% of women in early pregnancy (less than 12 weeks) were found to have incorrect knowledge about nutrition during pregnancy. If you are searching for credible information, look no further.  All of the information here is based on the latest guidance and scientific evidence.

Whatever your stage in life, there are some guiding principles for eating well. I like to think of these as foods to enjoy and those to swap out:

Foods to enjoy:

  • a wide range of colourful fruit and vegetables
  • 2 portions of protein per day such as lean meat or fish, eggs, lentils, pulses, beans, and tofu etc, which are also an important source of iron.
  • 3 portions of calcium rich food per day such as dairy products, or tinned fish, where you eat the bones, tahini, broccoli, tofu, almonds and dried fruit
  • plenty of fluid (approximately 8 glasses), which is especially important in pregnancy as your blood supply increases. If you are exercising or being sick you will need to drink more
  • eating with friends and family

Swap out:

  • refined carbohydrates for wholegrain carbohydrates (bulgur wheat, millet, brown bread, brown rice
  • sugary drink for water
  • saturated fats like butter, coconut and animal fat for lean protein and unsaturated fats such as avocado, extra virgin olive oil, and rapeseed oil.
  • ready meals and added salt to home cooked whole foods.

Specific foods to avoid during pregnancy

There are specific foods though that you should avoid during pregnancy, because they risk your baby’s health. This is a summary of foods to avoid during pregnancy and why:

  • Soft and unpasteurised cheese are more likely to contain a bacterium called Listeria. Listeria infection in pregnancy is extremely serious and can have a harmful effect on your baby.
  • Raw eggs that do not have the British lion stamp on them, which symbolises that they are vaccinated against Salmonella.
  • Soft serve ice-cream from machines, which is higher risk of Listeria.
  • Raw, undercooked or cured meat such as chorizo, salami, burgers, steak and prosciutto, because there is a risk of infection by Toxoplasmosis gondii. Thoroughly cooking or freezing for 4 days first, reduces this risk.
  • All pate, even vegetarian ones, as these may contain Listeria, while liver based pate has excess vitamin A, which is also damaging during pregnancy.
  • Raw fish and shell fish carry a risk of food poisoning and parasitic worms. This risk is greatly reduced if the fish is farmed within the UK or EU, and if the fish is frozen first.
  • Shark, swordfish and marlin are all high in mercury. Similarly limit tuna intake to two tuna steaks or 4 cans per week.
  • Liquorice root contains a chemical that may be harmful.
  • Limit caffeine consumption to approximately 200mg per day.
  • Alcohol. The safest approach is if you think you could become pregnant, to avoid all alcohol.

For lots more information about foods that you can still enjoy, for example mozzarella, even though it’s a soft cheese, have a look at my ebook which goes into much more detail. It’s called ‘eating during pregnancy’, with forewords by two obstetric doctors the @theOBGYNmum and @drsterlingOBGYN. I wrote it to provide mums to be with credible information on pregnancy nutrition.”

You can buy Harriet’s book on your Kindle or by clicking the link here; Eating During Pregnancy

Don’t forget to check her out @healthyeatingdr – where she shares an abundance of invaluable information via podcasts, which you can listen to on the go, books to read downloadable meal planners and nutrition check lists.

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