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How to cut through confusion when pregnant women are 'bombarded' with health advice

Pregnancy can be a bewildering time when conflicting advice on doing what's best for her baby can put a woman on guard, but there are some strategies to cut through the confusion.

3 tips to handle the noise on decisions for baby-to-be

As a mother you want to do the best thing for your babies, says Aliya Visram. The chiropractor is expecting her second child. (CBC)

AliyaVisramis seven months pregnant and anticipating the birth ofher second child.

But the Toronto woman says pregnancycan also be a fearful time, as womentry to decide what's best to do when faced withmultiple sources of health advice.

"As mothers and mothers-to-be, we all want to do what's best for our babies and children,"Visramsaid in anemail.

Still, there are some strategies to cut through the confusion.

This week's news that use of thepopular pain reliever acetaminophenduring pregnancy may increase the risk of behavioural problems in children is a recent example that could give some mothers-to-be pause for thought.

Theacetaminophenpaper is not thefirst to suggest an association between the use of a drug taken by thousands of pregnant women worldwide and the risk of harm to the developing brain. Many other studies suggest acetaminophen is safe.

"Two relatively large, well-done studies show a similar thing maybe deserves attention," said Emily Oster, author of Expecting Better. "On the other hand, there's this tendency sometimes to overreact to what was the last thing you read on the internet."

Oster is an economics professor at Brown University in Providence, R.I. Reflecting on her pregnancy,Osterwished she'd been better prepared to make decisions she felt were thrust upon her by doctors with little time to consider the options.

The experience motivated Oster, an expert in evaluating statistical data, to devote more than a year toresearching and writing the book.

"If you think about a question like 'Is it OK to have caffeine? You know, caffeine has been sometimes been linked to miscarriage.' I argue a lot in the book that those linkages are basically overstated and, in moderation, there's no excess risk. But there is a point which is if you think there's some excess risk and then you have a miscarriage and you had some coffee, I think it enhances people's feelings of guilt in a way that is sort of unfortunate."

Advice tuned out

The mixed messages emerging from studies of varying quality with different conclusions contributes to the confusion.

At his family medicine practice in Toronto, Dr.Nav Persaudoften gets questions from pregnant women about diet, exercise, medications or sexual activity.

Women receive a lot of advice during pregnancy, some unwanted and some from reliable sources, he said.

"When you are being bombarded with different advice, it's difficult to know what to believe and who to listen to," saidPersaud. "There is a tendency because it is confusing to just tune that advice out or, on the other hand, to unnecessarily avoid a lot of things."

As a researcher atSt. Michael's Hospital in Toronto, Persaudfought to get access tounpublished clinical trial data about the popular morning sickness drugDiclectin.

Since then, Persaud no longerreferspregnant women to commonly used resources, including from professional organizations, because he finds they can oversimplify a complex reality with categorical declarations of "safe" or "unsafe."

When you are being bombarded with different advice, it's difficult to know what to believe.-Dr.NavPersaud

In reality, the dose,exposure and stage of pregnancy, from planning to conceive through trimesters, all make a difference.

"When a pregnant woman is asking you, 'Yesor no, should I drink coffee?' it's tempting to provide an answer," Persaud said. "But in the long term it's impossible for another person to weigh ... the value of benefits of coffee against the potentialrisks. Ultimately it is a trap to defer the decision to someone else becauseit's likely to lead to a bad decision for that individual woman."

For Persaud, there is no substitutefrom going to look at the originalstudy itself. He recognizes that's practically impossible for many people.

Oster's tips to cut through the cacophony in studies include:

  • Compare probabilities in pregnancy with the risks women are often willing to take, such as driving a car.
  • Take a closer look at the risk.Studies often present risks as odds ratios, such as something increases the risk by five times. But it matters if it's the odds of something that's one in a million or one in 20.
  • Consider how believable the results of a study are.

For the acetaminophen paper, Oster zeroed in on major differences between moms who said they took the drug and those who didn't, which could bias the results. Maternal history of psychiatric illness, which the study's authors took into account in their analysis,is one difference that jumped out at her.

Drive to do best for baby

ForVisram, a chiropractor whoalso works in prenatal and postnatalcare, painrelief medications aren't necessarily bad. But she'sseen pregnant women come to her fearful about how to deal with pains in the back, groin, hip and elsewhere.

Visramoften recommends non-pharmacological approaches to pain, such as yoga.

"I think building a relationship with your health-care practitioner, especially during pregnancy, is crucially important and is a great place to start when faced with conflicting information."