How long after giving birth can i work out
Exercise After Pregnancy | ACOG
FAQs
Frequently Asked Questions
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Exercise has the following benefits for postpartum women:
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It helps strengthen and tone abdominal muscles.
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It boosts energy.
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It may help prevent postpartum depression.
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It promotes better sleep.
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It relieves stress.
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It can help you lose the extra weight that you may have gained during pregnancy.
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After having a baby, you should get at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity every week. You can divide the 150 minutes into 30-minute workouts on 5 days of the week or into smaller 10-minute sessions throughout each day. For example, you could go for three 10-minute walks each day.
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An aerobic activity is one in which you move large muscles of the body (like those in the legs and arms) in a rhythmic way.
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Moderate intensity means you are moving enough to raise your heart rate and start sweating. You can still talk normally, but you cannot sing. Examples of moderate-intensity aerobic activities include brisk walking and riding a bike on a level surface.
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A vigorous-intensity activity is one in which it is hard to talk without pausing for breath. If you followed a vigorous-intensity exercise program before pregnancy, it may be possible to return to your regular workouts soon after the baby is born. Be sure to talk with your obstetrician–gynecologist (ob-gyn) first.
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This type of exercise works the body’s major muscle groups, such as the legs, arms, and hips. Examples include yoga, Pilates, lifting weights, sit-ups, and push-ups. There are also exercises called Kegel exercises that help tone the muscles of the pelvic floor. Muscle-strengthening activities should be done in addition to your aerobic activity on at least 2 days a week.
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If you had a healthy pregnancy and a normal vaginal delivery, you should be able to start exercising again soon after the baby is born. Usually, it is safe to begin exercising a few days after giving birth—or as soon as you feel ready. If you had a cesarean birth or complications, ask your ob-gyn when it is safe to begin exercising again.
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Aim to stay active for 20 to 30 minutes a day. When you first start exercising after childbirth, try simple postpartum exercises that help strengthen major muscle groups, including abdominal and back muscles.
Gradually add moderate-intensity exercise. If you exercised vigorously before pregnancy or you are a competitive athlete, you can work up to vigorous-intensity activity.
Remember, even 10 minutes of exercise benefits your body. Stop exercising if you feel pain.
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When you are ready to start exercising, walking is a great way to get back in shape. Another good way to get daily exercise is by joining an exercise class.
Check with your local fitness clubs or community centers for classes that interest you, such as yoga, Pilates, spinning, and dance. Some gyms offer special postpartum exercise classes and classes you can take with your baby.
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If you do not want to join a gym but want the benefits of having someone to exercise with, ask a friend to be your workout buddy. If you want to exercise on your own, check out fitness videos and online exercise programs. Many are designed for women who have just had a baby.
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You may already have a great exercise tool in your pocket. Smart phone apps for exercise and fitness can help you stay motivated, keep track of your progress, and connect you with others with the same exercise goals. Many apps are free or cost very little.
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As you get ready for your workout, follow these steps:
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Wear loose-fitting clothing that will help keep you cool.
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If you are breastfeeding, feed your baby or express your milk before your workout to avoid any discomfort that may come from engorged breasts.
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Wear a bra that fits well and gives plenty of support to protect your breasts.
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Have a bottle of water handy and take several sips during your workout.
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The Move Your Way website from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services can help you find safe, fun ways to get active after pregnancy.
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Cesarean Birth: Birth of a fetus from the uterus through an incision (cut) made in the woman’s abdomen.
Complications: Diseases or conditions that happen as a result of another disease or condition. An example is pneumonia that occurs as a result of the flu. A complication also can occur as a result of a condition, such as pregnancy. An example of a pregnancy complication is preterm labor.
Kegel Exercises: Pelvic muscle exercises. Doing these exercises helps with bladder and bowel control as well as sexual function.
Obstetrician–Gynecologist (Ob-Gyn): A doctor with special training and education in women’s health.
Postpartum Depression: A type of depressive mood disorder that develops in the first year after the birth of a child. This type of depression can affect a woman’s ability to take care of her child.
Don't have an ob-gyn? Search for doctors near you.
FAQ131
Last updated: March 2022
Last reviewed: August 2022
Topics:
Pregnancy After Pregnancy Postpartum Healing and Support Nutrition and Exercise
Copyright 2023 by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. All rights reserved. Read copyright and permissions information.
This information is designed as an educational aid for the public. It offers current information and opinions related to women's health. It is not intended as a statement of the standard of care. It does not explain all of the proper treatments or methods of care. It is not a substitute for the advice of a physician. Read ACOG’s complete disclaimer.
Safe return to exercise after pregnancy – pelvic floor, benefits
Safe return to exercise after pregnancy – pelvic floor, benefits | Pregnancy Birth and Baby beginning of content9-minute read
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Key facts
- Regular exercise after you've had a baby will help you lose weight and strengthen and tone your muscles.
- Exercise is also good for your mental wellbeing.
- It's best to wait 4 to 6 months before returning to your previous level of physical activity.
What are the benefits of exercise after pregnancy?
Exercise can help you recover after childbirth, make you stronger and improve your mood. Even if you're tired and not feeling motivated, there's plenty you can do to get your body moving. But no 2 pregnancies are the same. How soon you're ready to start exercising depends on your individual circumstances. You should always check with a health professional first.
Regular exercise after you've had a baby will:
- strengthen and tone your muscles
- help you recover from labour if you gave birth vaginally
- raise your energy levels so you feel less tired
- help you to lose weight and become fitter
Exercise is good for your mental wellbeing. It can relieve stress and help prevent postnatal depression. You are also more likely to get outside and meet people.
But don't worry about not getting enough exercise. Caring for a newborn can be hard work. So, you might not have the energy or time to work out as much as you'd like. Do the best you can – even 10 minutes is better than nothing.
How has my body changed after pregnancy?
When you feel ready to exercise, it's very important to not overdo it. Your body has been through some big changes. You will need time to recover, even if you're feeling great after having your baby.
Labour and birth can weaken your pelvic muscles. Some people can have problems with bladder control so avoid heavy exercise. Gentle exercise is best.
Pregnancy hormones affect your joints and ligaments. This affect can continue for up to 6 months after the birth. This can put you at greater risk of injury.
Your abdominal muscles may have separated during the pregnancy. They usually go back to normal after the birth, but sometimes they can stay separated. You will need to do exercises to strengthen these muscles to avoid back pain and injury.
The pelvic floor can be weakened after pregnancy, especially if you:
- had a large baby
- pushed for a long-time during labour
Your pelvic floor includes the muscles and ligaments that support your:
- bladder
- uterus
- bowel
Regular exercises will help to strengthen your pelvic floor. But you should take care not to do more damage by exercising too vigorously too soon.
Be careful of using heavy weights or doing high-impact exercise. These can increase your chance of prolapse. This is when an organ, such as the uterus (womb), drops down from its normal position.
When can I start exercising after pregnancy?
How quickly you return to exercise depends on:
- how fit you were before you had your baby
- what happened during your labour
It's best not to return to your previous level of physical activity until 4 to 6 months after the birth.
After vaginal and caesarean births, avoid swimming until:
- your bleeding has stopped
- you have healed completely
Wait until your 6-week postnatal check-up with your doctor or obstetrician before:
- going back to the gym
- starting a group exercise program
Returning to exercise after a vaginal birth
You can start doing gentle pelvic floor and abdominal exercises one to 2 days after the birth. If you feel any pain, stop.
When you feel like it, start with a gentle walk, perhaps while pushing the pram. Then, at your own pace, gradually increase the time and pace of your walks. Build up to a 30-minute walk every day if you can.
Returning to exercise after caesarean
A caesarean is a major operation and it will take you at least 6 weeks to heal. However, you can still do pelvic floor exercises from around 3 days after the birth. You can start to exercise your abdominal muscles as soon as you feel able to. Avoid sit ups, crunches, or abdominal curls. These can put pressure on your scar.
Avoid lifting anything heavier than your baby for 6 weeks after birth. Tighten your tummy and keep your back straight if you need to lift something around the house.
Until around 12 weeks (3 months) after birth, you will still be healing inside. It is OK to start walking, do low-impact aerobics or cycle. Stop if there is any:
- discomfort
- pain
- pulling sensation on your scar
If you experience any of this, wait a few more weeks before exercising again.
What low-risk exercises can I do after pregnancy?
The following exercises are suitable in the days after you have your baby. Try to do them once or twice a day.
Abdominal exercises or abdominal bracing
Choose one of these positions:
- sitting
- standing
- lying on your side
- lying on your back
- kneeling on all fours
Pull in your lower tummy towards your spine. Hold for 5 seconds and breathe normally. Relax, and repeat 5 to 10 times. You can practice this throughout the day, such as when you are:
- picking up your baby
- getting in and out of bed
- standing up and sitting down
Pelvic floor exercises
- Sit and lean slightly forward with a straight back.
- Squeeze and lift the muscles around your vagina. This should feel like you are trying to stop a wee. Hold as you count to 5, then relax.
- If you can't hold for 5 seconds, that is okay. Simply hold for as long as you can. You can increase the hold time as it becomes easier.
- Repeat this about 10 to 15 times.
Other exercises
Other exercises that are safe after pregnancy include:
- walking
- swimming and aqua aerobics (once the bleeding has stopped)
- yoga
- Pilates
- low-impact aerobics
- light weight training
- cycling
You can incorporate exercise into your day, such as:
- when you meet up with friends
- while you're doing other tasks
For example, you can:
- do pelvic floor exercises while you're breastfeeding or driving
- walk with your baby in the pram rather than driving
- do your abdominal exercises on the floor next to your baby
For at least 3 months, try to avoid:
- heavy weights
- sit ups
- high-intensity aerobic activity such as running and tennis
When should I be concerned about exercising?
Before starting any high-impact exercises, cough or jump when you have a full bladder. If you don't leak urine, you're probably ready to exercise.
If you're still leaking urine, this means that your pelvic floor needs more recovery time. Talk to your doctor or a physiotherapist. They can give you advice to help strengthen your pelvic floor.
You can find a physio near you using the Service Finder.
FIND A HEALTH SERVICE — The Service Finder can help you find doctors, pharmacies, hospitals and other health services.
You may have a prolapse if you:
- have trouble emptying your bowel or bladder
- feel a sense of pressure in your vagina
- notice a bulge or swelling in your vagina
Prolapse is not a concern to your health, but it can be uncomfortable. If your symptoms are bothering you, you should see your doctor. They can help organise treatment, which can include:
- making lifestyle changes
- doing physiotherapy
- having a pessary (a silicone device) placed into your vagina to support your prolapsed organs
- surgery to repair your pelvic floor
- Talk to your doctor or maternal child health nurse.
- Call the National Continence Helpline on 1800 33 00 66.
- Visit the pelvicfloorfirst.org.au website for more information.
Speak to a maternal child health nurse
Call Pregnancy, Birth and Baby to speak to a maternal child health nurse on 1800 882 436 or video call. Available 7am to midnight (AET), 7 days a week.
Sources:
Sports Medicine Australia (Exercise in pregnancy and the postpartum period), Women and Newborn Health Service (WA gov) (Physiotherapy after childbirth), South Adelaide Local Health Network (SA gov) (Now that you have had your baby Flinders Women and Children), Pelvic Floor First (Continence Foundation of Australia) (Returning to sport or exercise after birth), Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care (Treatment options for Pelvic Organ Prolapse)Learn more here about the development and quality assurance of healthdirect content.
Last reviewed: September 2022
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- What happens to your body in childbirth
- Physiotherapy advice after pregnancy
- Body image after having a baby
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Sex after childbirth.
When can you have sex after giving birth?Sex after childbirth, according to many women giving birth, is very similar to the very first time. Feelings are indescribable. But some women after the birth of a child consciously eschew intimacy with a man. Let's try to figure out how to return to a normal sex life.
When can I have sex after giving birth?
You can start sexual relations as early as 4-6 weeks after discharge from the hospital. During this time, vaginal ruptures heal, the placenta attaches to the wall of the uterine cavity, the uterus and vagina return to normal, to their normal volume. Until that time, the entire uterus is essentially an open wound, which can easily get an infection that causes endometritis (inflammation of the uterus). To restore the tone of the muscles of the perineum, it is recommended to do the Kegel exercise.
If you think that these rules can be neglected after a caesarean section, then you are mistaken. The place of attachment of the placenta to the wall of the uterus should also heal and heal. You also need to wait until the scar on the uterus heals. In any case, only a doctor will tell you how long you can have sex after giving birth.
Return of desire
For physiological reasons, in the first year after the birth of a child, a woman experiences increased vaginal dryness, even if she is very aroused. This is because the body does not see the need for it. After all, it is too early to start a new child, while there is a baby who needs the mother's care, her undivided attention. It can also be a subconscious fear, because a significant part of the reproductive system was injured and the penetration of a foreign body into it can cause severe pain.
There may also be banal fatigue: a small child takes a lot of energy, especially if you need to combine care for him with household chores. By night, the woman just wants to fall down and sleep, without participating in "games under the covers." Yes, and nervous tension, the expectation that at the most crucial moment the child will wake up and demand attention. All this does not contribute to the return to sexual activity.
Psychologists also note that many women hold a grudge against a man. He did not have to go through a difficult birth, devote 100% of his time to the child, and even manage the household. That is why newly-made mothers deliberately refuse sex, hoping in this way to take at least a little revenge on their husband.
Many women lose their self-confidence. The birth of a child leaves a lot of traces on the body: stretch marks, sagging breasts, lethargy of the skin of the perineum. A woman ceases to feel desirable and embarrassed to appear naked in front of her husband.
The presence of all these problems does not mean that this is the end of sexual relations between parents. Lubricant will help with vaginal dryness. The tenderness and trepidation of a man's attitude will help a woman feel more confident. And if the husband also helps with everyday affairs, mommy will have the strength to caress not only the child. To relax and establish contact, you can try to start with a massage, lie down in the bath. It is also important to take into account the selection of a pose: a woman must control the depth and strength of penetration herself in order to “test the soil”. And if nervous tension does not allow you to relax because of the little man in the next room, ask your grandmother to take a walk with him for a while.
Contraception
There are speculations that as long as a woman is breastfeeding or her menstrual cycle has returned to normal, there is no need to fear a new pregnancy. It is because of this false information that many couples "accidentally" get pregnant. Therefore, if such an early new conception is not included in your plans, you need to take care of protection.
- Hormonal preparations are not always suitable. Some of them can harm the baby by passing through the blood into the mother's breast milk. Although some experts argue that with the right choice of contraception, such problems can be avoided.
- Good barrier contraception: condoms. diaphragm, spermicides. They provide up to 97% protection against unplanned pregnancy. To improve the effect, you can combine spermicidal lubricant with a diaphragm.
- Installation of an intrauterine device is indicated no earlier than six months after childbirth. The main thing is that everything heals completely.
The restoration of sexual relations becomes the final stage of rehabilitation after pregnancy. Sex after the first birth is especially exciting, but even it can be handled if you approach it wisely.
Gynecologist Usacheva told when it is possible to have sex after childbirth
- Health
After childbirth, women often forget about their sexual life, giving all their attention and love to the baby. But if the desire appeared within a couple of weeks after returning from the hospital, you still should not rush. As well as forget about contraception.
February 20, 2022
- Source:
- Getty Images
When can I?
There are women who, in fear of losing their husband's love or in an urgent desire to please him, resume their sexual life as soon as they have recovered from the hospital. But doctors remind: it is necessary to wait for time.
According to Natalia Hünninen, an andrologist and sexologist at the St. Luke's Clinical Hospital, the duration of abstinence depends on the severity of pregnancy and childbirth.
- If the birth was natural and without complications, you can start one month after the birth of the baby. If a woman gave birth by caesarean section or she had incisions, ruptures in childbirth, the onset is possible not earlier than 40 days, or even two months. Everything is decided individually at the gynecologist’s appointment, says Natalia Hünninen.
Obstetrician-gynecologist Irina Usacheva believes that even a month after natural childbirth may not be enough.
- Sex life after childbirth is possible not earlier than after 6 weeks. It is also advisable before this moment to undergo an examination by your gynecologist and do an ultrasound of the pelvic organs to make sure that nothing is left in the uterine cavity and all possible wounds or tears have healed, the doctor adds.
According to Irina Usacheva, it takes at least 2 months to restore the female reproductive system after childbirth (in particular, during this time the uterus should decrease in size). However, the full recovery of the female body will take much more time - about two years.
Unreliable methods
When family life begins to return to normal, experts advise women not to forget about protection during intimacy. Stories about the impossibility of getting pregnant even if there is no menstruation are nothing more than a myth.
Doctors named 4 main myths about contraception that young mothers still believe in.
"If you breastfeed, you can't get pregnant"
- How else can you! Even against the background of lactational amenorrhea ( when a woman who has given birth during the period of breastfeeding does not yet have menstruation - Note ed. .) spontaneous ovulation may occur. Therefore, with unprotected intercourse, the likelihood of pregnancy is very high. To use this method of contraception, you need to consider several important points. Firstly, its effectiveness is maximum when feeding the baby on demand with interruptions of no more than 4 hours during the day and 6 hours at night. That is, you need to feed at least 7-8 times a day. Secondly, you can use this method only before the onset of menstruation, - said Irina Usacheva.
See also
Coitus interruption is a reliable method of contraception
- No! The Pearl Index of coitus interruptus is 4-22. Individual spermatozoa can be found in the pre-ejaculate or pre-seminal secretion - a special fluid that is released in the body of men when aroused. Therefore, pregnancy can also occur against the background of interrupted intercourse, - summarizes Irina Usacheva.
Pearl Index is the failure rate or indicator of the effectiveness of a particular contraceptive method. The lower the index, the more reliable the method. The index is calculated by the number of unplanned conceptions during the year in 100 women who used one or another method of contraception. For example, in combined oral contraceptives, the Pearl index is 0.1-0.9.
Andrologist Natalia Hünninen adds that besides unreliability, coitus interruptus has other disadvantages - it has a bad effect on men's health. According to the doctor, this method of contraception is not physiological for the male body, so it can lead to urological problems.
"Taking a vaginal shower after sex will protect against pregnancy"
- A vaginal shower, bath or douching after sex does not affect a woman's ability to become pregnant. But the likelihood that this can disrupt the microflora of the vagina is very high, warns Irina Usacheva.
"Calendar to help"
Menstruation calendar, when a woman calculates the expected moment of ovulation in her cycle and avoids sexual intercourse at this time, as a method of contraception is ineffective.