Please note: This website has recently moved from www.health.gov to odphp.health.gov. www.health.gov is now the official website of ODPHP’s parent organization, the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health (OASH). Please update your bookmarks for easy access to all our resources. 

Pregnancy Health: Exercise Programs to Prevent Gestational Hypertension

About this resource:

Systematic Review

Source: The Guide to Community Preventive Services

Last Reviewed: February 2019

The Community Preventive Services Task Force recommends exercise programs for pregnant women to reduce the development of high blood pressure in pregnancy. In these programs, women get regular physical activity from before the 16th week of pregnancy through birth. The programs can take place in health care, home, or community-based settings. They must include 1 or both of these components:

  • Supervised exercise classes that meet at least 3 times weekly for 30 to 60 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity
  • Regular, moderate-intensity walking sessions where women (alone or in a group) walk for 90 to 150 minutes a week or 11,000 steps a day 
Read more about this resource

Objectives related to this resource (4)

Suggested Citation

1.

Guide to Community Preventive Services. (2019). Pregnancy Health: Exercise Programs to Prevent Gestational Hypertension. Retrieved from https://www.thecommunityguide.org/findings/pregnancy-health-exercise-programs-prevent-gestational-hypertension