March of Dimes Honors Researcher Who Showed Pre-pregnancy Weight Affects Breastfeeding
Kathleen Maher Rasmussen Receives Agnes Higgins Award
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 31, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The world-renowned researcher whose work influenced new guidelines for appropriate weight gain during pregnancy and helped explain how over- and under-nutrition affects breastfeeding has received the March of Dimes Agnes Higgins Award for outstanding achievements in the field of maternal-fetal nutrition.
Kathleen Maher Rasmussen, ScD, RD, professor of nutritional sciences and international professor at the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, received the award from Janis Biermann, MS, senior vice president for Education & Health Promotion at the March of Dimes, during the 140th annual meeting of the American Public Health Association held here.
Dr. Rasmussen's work helped identify who benefits from nutritional supplementation during pregnancy or lactation. It examined the trade-offs, first in animals and then in women, between mother and fetus, an approach that influenced new guidelines for appropriate weight gain during pregnancy.
"Dr. Rasmussen's research on maternal nutrition shows how important it is for women to maintain a healthy weight during pregnancy. Eating too much, or too little, has far-reaching health-consequences for mothers and their babies," said Ms. Biermann. "We realize that weight is a sensitive subject for many women and that some health care professionals are uncomfortable discussing it, but weight is a risk factor that can be modified. If a woman starts pregnancy at a healthy weight, it can lower the risk of several health problems."
Dr. Rasmussen's early work on rats focused on under-nutrition and showed that the animals had fewer implanted embryos and fewer pups delivered. It also showed that the rats had reduced volume of milk production and that the milk was of lower quality, with less vitamin A than the milk of properly fed rats. Her findings from a later supplementation trial among Indonesia women led the World Health Organization to change their policies on vitamin A supplementation.
Dr. Rasmussen and her students also broke new ground in understanding the threat being overweight at conception has on successful breastfeeding. Her work on over-nutrition found that there is poor metabolic transition from pregnancy to lactation in rats as well as delayed onset of milk secretion and shorter breastfeeding in women.
Dr. Rasmussen's work was built on the foundation laid by Agnes Higgins of Canada's Montreal Diet Dispensary, where Mrs. Higgins helped pregnant women give birth to healthy babies by focusing on the mother's nutritional needs. Services provided at the Dispensary were the precursor of government nutrition programs for pregnant women in the United States, such as WIC, the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children. The March of Dimes established an award in her name in 1980.
Dr. Rasmussen served as chairwoman of the Institute of Medicine committee that wrote the 2009 report, Weight Gain in Pregnancy: Reexamining the Guidelines, which set new guidelines for appropriate weight gain during pregnancy. She also has served for 24 years as program director of the only National Institutes of Health-funded training grant devoted specifically to maternal and child nutrition.
Dr. Rasmussen received a degree in molecular biology from Brown University and both her master's and doctoral degrees in nutrition from Harvard University. She is a founding member and was president of the International Society for Research in Human Milk. She also served as President for the American Society for Nutritional Sciences (now the American Society for Nutrition). She received the Excellence in Nutrition Education Award from the American Society of Nutrition in 2006 as well as its award for mentoring in 2009.
The March of Dimes is the leading nonprofit organization for pregnancy and baby health. With chapters nationwide and its premier event, March for Babies®, the March of Dimes works to improve the health of babies by preventing birth defects, premature birth and infant mortality. For the latest resources and information, visit marchofdimes.com or nacersano.org. Find us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.
SOURCE March of Dimes
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