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Best Healthy Snacks For Pregnant Women

healthy snacks for pregnant women

Now that you’re pregnant, the food choices you make go a long way in keeping your baby and you healthy and strong. But even as you cope with the enormous physical changes in your body, your digestive system may appear to have an agenda of its own!  So, how do you strike a balance?

Your doctor will recommend a healthy diet plan that includes foods rich in specific nutrients like iron, folate, iodine, calcium, magnesium, and several vitamins. And not to forget, lots of fluids.1 But the changes in your body can throw it out of whack. In the early weeks, morning sickness, with its attendant nausea and aversion to certain foods, can dampen hunger. From the second trimester onward, as your baby develops rapidly, you will need to consume more calories. To help a mom-to-be maintain a healthy weight gain through pregnancy, get nutrient-rich foods, and cope with likely digestion problems, dieticians recommend eating three small main meals interspersed with about three snacks a day.  And snacking can be the game changer here for you!

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Snack To Beat Hunger Pangs and Get In Nutrients

Here are some good reasons for you to eat a range of healthy snacks through your pregnancy:

Have About 3 Snacks A Day

Many dieticians advise pregnant women to eat 3 snacks in addition to 3 meals a day. In the last phase of pregnancy, it’s easier to eat 5–6 mini meals than the usual 3 which can cause heartburn. Small, nutritious snacks during this time will boost your energy and keep you comfortable.3

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Meet Nutritional Needs Of Each Trimester

First Trimester: Your energy needs during this period remain the same so there is no need to increase your total food intake, though you do need to be careful about what you are eating and drinking. Try to make sure that you are including some essential nutrients in each of your meals and snacks. Make every snack count!

Snacks Rich In Folate Or Folic Acid

Called folic acid when added to foods, folate is a B-group vitamin that helps prevent the growing fetus from developing any neural tube defects. Women planning a pregnancy and those in the first trimester of pregnancy should make sure they are getting enough folic acid in their diet naturally and through supplements.

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Sources: Some of the best sources of folate include spinach, asparagus, bran flakes, dried beans, broccoli, chick peas, and Brussels sprouts. Oranges and orange juice, strawberries, potatoes, wholegrain bread, hazelnuts, unsalted peanuts, and walnuts are other rich sources of folate.4

Snack Ideas

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Snacks Rich In Vitamin A

Essential for a baby’s cell and organ growth, and for the development of the baby’s bones, circulatory, nervous, and respiratory systems, vitamin A boosts the mother’s immune system too.

Sources: Retinol is vitamin A from animal foods and dairy products. Eggs, fish, and milk are excellent sources. Carotenes are vitamin A found in plant foods and are converted to retinol by our bodies. Beta-carotene is an example. Rich sources are orange, green, and yellow fruits and vegetables such as carrots, butternut squash, sweet potatoes, oranges, mangoes, papaya, and peaches.5 6

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Note: While vitamin A is important for human health, studies indicate that very high levels during pregnancy could cause birth defects. So it is best to avoid vitamin A supplements and get your vitamin A naturally from foods. However, avoid liver or limit it to just once or twice a month since it has a very high content of vitamin A and too much of it is not safe during pregnancy.7

Snack Ideas

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Snacks Rich In Iron

Iron is required throughout your pregnancy for manufacturing red blood cells and for the placenta to grow. The developing fetus sources iron from your body and will need enough stock to last through the first 5–6 months after birth. Although iron losses from your body are much less during pregnancy because you are not menstruating, you still need a good amount of iron. Iron deficiency can make you anemic and tired.8

Sources: Green leafy vegetables, lean meat, chicken, seafood, dried fruits, nuts, and iron-fortified cereal.9

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Snack Ideas

Snacks Rich In Iodine

Iodine deficiency during pregnancy raises the risk of impaired physical and mental growth in a newborn baby. Iodine is required to produce the thyroid hormone, a very important hormone for the baby’s growth and development.

Sources: Eggs, meat, dairy products, seafood, and seaweed.10

Snack Ideas

Second Trimester: Calcium, magnesium, and vitamin D are essential for a baby’s growth and development during this period. Make sure your snacks (and your meals) include foods rich in all of these. Energy needs are much higher during the second trimester.

Snacks Rich In Calcium

Vital for the development of the baby’s teeth and bones, calcium also helps to keep your blood pressure under control.

Sources: Tofu, cheese, milk, yogurt, green leafy vegetables, bread and other products made with fortified flour, dried figs, almonds, fish such as sardines and pilchards whose bones can be mashed and eaten, and soy drinks that have added calcium. Sardines provide valuable omega 3 fatty acids too. These fatty acids are important for the baby’s eye and brain development.11

Snack Ideas

Snacks Rich In Magnesium

Magnesium is also an essential mineral required for bone development.

Sources: Magnesium-rich foods include sunflower or pumpkin seeds, almonds, peanuts and peanut butter, cashew, baked potatoes, wholewheat bread, milk, soymilk, magnesium-fortified breakfast cereals, and plain yogurt.12

Snack Ideas

Snacks Rich In Vitamin D

Vitamin D promotes the absorption and use of calcium in the body. This is particularly important during pregnancy. While sunlight is perhaps the best source of vitamin D, there are very few foods naturally rich in vitamin D.

Sources: Eggs, red meat, and the flesh of oily fish such as salmon, sardines, mackerel, and herring are some food sources of vitamin D. In the United States, cold cereals, milk, soy and almond beverages, and orange juice often come fortified with vitamin D.13

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Third Trimester: Lots of extra energy, lots of water and fluids to prevent constipation, and vitamins B1 and C are essential requirements in this period of pregnancy. You should try to increase your calorie intake by about 200 calories each day.

Snacks Rich In Vitamin B1 (Thiamine)

Thiamine helps you release energy from food and is important in energy metabolism. It plays a critical role in the functioning, growth, and development of cells. It plays a major role in the development of the baby’s brain too.

Sources: You can source thiamine occasionally from pork, and more regularly from trout, mussels, tuna, beans, green vegetables, fortified cereals, wholewheat bread, wholewheat macaroni, milk, yogurt, oatmeal, and sunflower seeds.14

Snack Ideas

Snacks Rich In Vitamin B Complex

The other vitamin B complex vitamins also important for the baby include:

Snacks Rich In Vitamin C

Vitamin C is actually important through all 3 trimesters. It helps:

Sources: Naturally found in a wide variety of fruits and vegetables, good sources of vitamin C include tomatoes, citrus fruits, blackcurrants, kiwi fruit, strawberries, potatoes, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, carrots, radishes, celery, and red and green peppers.16

Snack Ideas

Other Important Nutrients To Get In

There are a host of other nutrients that also play important roles in the baby’s development during your pregnancy. You will see that most of the sources are listed as part of other nutrients. Consequently, women are rarely known to have deficiencies in these nutrients if they are careful about following a healthy pregnancy diet.

Snacks Suggested By Ayurveda

Ayurvedic texts recommend that a pregnant woman should eat whatever her heart desires, barring foods that are considered harmful for her baby. Use these tips from Ayurveda while making your food choices: [pullquote]A simple Ayurvedic snack: a pinch of cardamom or turmeric powder in a warm glass of milk to aid digestion, build immunity, and keep you full.17[/pullquote]

Some sattvic foods that could be part of your snacks:

Snacks To Help You Through Morning Sickness

Nearly 50 percent of pregnant women go through morning sickness, the term used to describe the nausea, vomiting, and fatigue that manifest in early pregnancy. Your medical service provider will recommend changing your dietary patterns and daily routine to help you through this time.18

Here are a few examples of healthy snacks to help you through this difficult phase19:

Dos And Don’ts While Snacking

References[+]

References
1 Pregnancy and diet. Better Health Channel.
2 Have a healthy diet in pregnancy. NHS Choices.
3 Riley, Laura. Pregnancy: The Ultimate Week-by-week Pregnancy Guide. Meredith Books, 2006.
4 Folic acid (folate) and pregnancy. Better Health Channel.
5 Vitamin A and pregnancy Better Health Channel.
6 Wilcock, Fiona. “Super Drinks for Pregnancy: Juices, smoothies and soups to meet key dietary requirements”. Hachette UK, 2015.
7 Vitamins, supplements and nutrition in pregnancy. NHS Choices.
8 Iron and pregnancy. Better Health Channel.
9, 10 Iron and pregnancy. Better Health Channel.
11, 13, 16 Vitamins, supplements and nutrition in pregnancy. NHS Choices.
12 Magnesium. National Institutes of Health.
14 Thiamin. National Institutes of Health.
15 Roles Of Vitamin B In Pregnancy. American Pregnancy Association.
17 Promoting The Health Of Mother And Baby During Pregnancy Using Ayurveda. California College Of Ayurveda.
18 Nausea and morning sickness. NHS Choices.
19 Nausea and morning sickness. NHS Choices.
20 Morning sickness. American Academy Of Family Physicians.
21 Ernst, E., and M. H. Pittler. “Efficacy of ginger for nausea and vomiting: a systematic review of randomized clinical trials.” British journal of anaesthesia 84, no. 3 (2000): 367-371.
22 Morning Sickness Relief. American Pregnancy Association.
23 Healthy eating during pregnancy and breastfeeding. Family Health Service.
24 Eat Healthy During Pregnancy. Healthfinder.gov
25 Pregnancy and diet. Better Health Channel
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