Literature
首页EnglishHealth News

Dos and Don‘ts of Traveling While Pregnant

来源:WebMD Medical News
摘要:Whetherbyplane,train,automobile,orevenboat,travelingwhilepregnantinvolvesitsownsetofchallengesandguidelines。““Ialwaystellmypatientsnotravelafter32weeks,becauseifshedelivers,shewon‘thavemethere,“saysElizabethNye,MD,anobstetricianatRushPresbyter......

点击显示 收起

Whether by plane, train, automobile, or even boat, traveling while pregnant involves its own set of challenges and guidelines. But a little advance planning along with some common sense can make all the difference in the world -- anywhere in the world -- when it comes to pregnancy travel.

"It's wrong to say a categorical 'no' when it comes to traveling while pregnant," says Frank A. Chervenak, MD. Chervenak is a professor and chairman of the department of obstetrics and gynecology and the director of maternal-fetal medicine at Weill Medical College of Cornell University in New York City. "You need to individualize each and every situation," he says. For example, "I can imagine a scenario after eight months where travel is permitted."

The bottom line? "Discuss any travel with your doctor and see what he or she thinks," Chervenak says. "If your doctor is concerned, then you should be concerned and really weigh whether the travel is necessary."

"I always tell my patients no travel after 32 weeks, because if she delivers, she won't have me there," says Elizabeth Nye, MD, an obstetrician at Rush Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center in Chicago. "She may have to deliver in a strange place with a doctor she has never met."

Pregnancy Travel: Better Safe Than Sorry

There is some general commonsense advice for all women who are traveling while pregnant no matter what transportation route you take or where your destination is:

Pregnancy Travel: Up, Up, and Away?

"In general, air travel is OK during the entire pregnancy," says Kenneth Johnson, DO, an associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. "But common sense dictates that women with complicated pregnancies involving twins, hypertensive disease, severe nausea, placenta previa, preterm labor, and other pregnancy-related complications should not fly." Most airlines do allow pregnant women to fly until about a month before their due dates.

Chervenak agrees: "As long as there are no known complications to pregnancy, traveling on an airplane is reasonable." But he says that "it's important for pregnant women to get up and walk around every hour during flight.

1 | 2 | 3