Women
who take extra vitamin D during their pregnancy are more likely to have a
‘natural’ delivery, according to new research.
The
study, published in the Journal of Public Health, analysed results from the
MAVIDOS trial which involved 965 women being randomly allocated an extra 1,000
International Units (IU) per day of vitamin D during their pregnancy or a
placebo.
Analysis
showed that 65.6% of women who took extra Vitamin D had a spontaneous vaginal
delivery, or “natural” delivery, compared to 57.9% in the placebo group.
Fewer
women from the vitamin D group had an assisted delivery (13.2%) compared with
the placebo group (19.4%).
However,
the number of women in each group needing a caesarean operation to deliver
their baby was similar (vitamin D 21.3%, placebo 22.7%).
Dr
Rebecca Moon, a clinical lecturer at the MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Centre
(MRC LEC), University of Southampton and NIHR Southampton Biomedical Research
Centre, said: “Most women want to have a ‘natural delivery’ of their baby.
“Our work suggests that taking extra vitamin D
during their pregnancy might help them to achieve this.
“The
women taking the extra vitamin D also had less blood loss after delivery,
highlighting why this is so important. Further evidence is now needed to more
thoroughly inform public health policy and clinical practice.”
MAVIDOS
involved researchers from the University of Southampton and University Hospital
Southampton NHS Foundation Trust (UHSFT) and is a large project looking at the
benefits of vitamin D supplementation in pregnancy.
Professor
Nicholas Harvey, MRC LEC deputy director and lead of MAVIDOS, said: “Vitamin D
deficiency is very common in the UK. We have also shown that extra vitamin D in
pregnancy can improve the mother’s vitamin D level and has benefits to their
child’s skeleton.
“Importantly,
National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidance recommends that all
pregnant women take 400 IU vitamin D per day.”
Source:
Evening Standard