Doctors Back Pregnancy Weight-Gain Limits

Doctors are urging overweight or obese women to gain less weight during pregnancy. The new guidelines come from the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. These are the doctors who take care of most pregnant women. The guidelines say that overweight women should gain 15 to 25 pounds during the last 2 trimesters of pregnancy. Obese women should gain no more than 11 to 20 pounds. For women of normal weight, the doctors recommend a gain of 25 to 35 pounds. This should increase to 28 to 40 pounds for underweight women. The advice on weight gain is intended to lower risk to both the woman and the baby. Gaining too much weight during pregnancy can lead to gestational diabetes. This form of the disease disappears after childbirth. However, it increases the woman’s risk of developing type 2 diabetes later. Excess weight also can increase the risk of cesarean section.

Content restricted. Requires subscription

Antibiotics Don’t Calm Lingering Coughs

That lingering cough may be annoying, but taking an antibiotic won’t help in most cases, a new study shows. The study included more than 2,000 adults with coughs that had lasted at least 4 weeks. Their symptoms did not suggest they had pneumonia or another infection caused by bacteria. People were randomly divided into 2 groups. One group took the antibiotic amoxicillin for a week. The other group took placebo (fake) pills. People who got the real drugs didn’t get better any faster than the placebo group. Their symptoms lasted just as long and were not any milder. But the group that got the antibiotic did have more side effects. These included nausea, rash and diarrhea. Results were similar for both younger and older adults. The journal Lancet Infectious Disease published the study online December 18.

Content restricted. Requires subscription

Study: Shorter Hospital Stays Not Harmful

Getting patients out of the hospital quickly doesn’t have to hurt care, a new study suggests. The study looked at 129 Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals. It covered a 14-year period ending in 2010. In that time, the average length of stay in the hospital dropped 27%. Researchers had thought that the rate of readmission — returning to the hospital within 30 days — might increase. But readmissions also dropped. This suggests that most people were not discharged too early. Deaths within 30 and 90 days after leaving the hospital also dropped. Researchers said some aspects of the VA system may help explain the results. Medical care in VA hospitals is provided by hospitalists. These are doctors who care only for people in the hospital. They don’t see patients in an office. The use of hospitalists has been linked with higher quality of care.

Content restricted. Requires subscription

Sandy Hook and Coping with Trauma

Both children and adults may face a greater risk of psychiatric symptoms after the tragedy last week at Sandy Hook Elementary School. Twenty children and seven adults, including the shooter, were killed December 14 at the school in Newtown, Connecticut. Adam Lanza, 20, also had killed his mother at home. Many groups are bringing resources into Newtown to help people there as they try to cope with their losses. In the rest of the country, it’s best to shield children from news media, experts said. Avoid too much exposure yourself as well. Signs of trauma might include obsessive worry or trouble with sleeping, eating and staying focused. Parents should reassure children that they are safe and that shootings in a school are rare events, experts said. ABC News Nightline was among the news media that discussed coping strategies.

Content restricted. Requires subscription