Advertisement

PERSONAL HEALTH : Lightweight Plans for New Moms

Share

Most new mothers yearn to lose excess “baby fat” and squeeze back into those jeans, pronto. But how best to do that has sparked woman-to-woman debate for years.

Some claim the pounds will just melt off. Others swear by exercise, breast-feeding or other strategies. Researchers don’t agree either.

Breast-feeding is the way to lose pounds postpartum, says Kathryn Dewey, a professor of nutrition at the University of California, Davis. She followed 87 women, about half of whom breast-fed, for a year after childbirth. Breast-feeding moms lost twice as much weight as those who bottle-fed their infants (10 pounds to 5 pounds).

Advertisement

But another study disagrees.

“We didn’t find breast-feeding beneficial for weight loss,” says Dr. Charles W. Schauberger, an obstetrician/gynecologist in La Crosse, Wis. His team followed 795 women for six months. Two-thirds were breast-feeding at the study’s start; less than a fifth were at six months.

Moms who returned to work soon after childbirth lost more weight, Schauberger found. So did smokers, although he emphasizes it’s not a wise weight-loss strategy. Exercise didn’t seem to help, but Schauberger suspects the women weren’t exercising vigorously enough.

On some points researchers do concur: Time and patience pay off. “The key is the length of breast-feeding,” insists Dewey, who found weight loss accelerating after three months.

Allow six months, Schauberger tells women, to return to pre-pregnancy weight.

Advertisement