Good nutrition before pregnancy not only helps prevent anemia, but it also helps build other nutritional stores in your body. Eating a healthy, balanced diet before and during pregnancy helps keep up your levels of iron and other important nutrients needed for your growing baby.
Good food sources of iron include:
- Meats. Beef, pork, lamb, liver, and other organ meats.
- Poultry. Chicken, duck, turkey, and liver, especially dark meat.
- Fish. Shellfish, including (fully cooked) clams, mussels, and oysters are good. So are sardines and anchovies. The FDA recommends that pregnant women eat 8 to 12 ounces per week of fish that are lower in mercury. These include salmon, shrimp, pollock, cod, tilapia, tuna (light canned), and catfish. Don't eat fish with high levels of mercury, such as tilefish from the Gulf of Mexico, shark, swordfish, and king mackerel. Limit white (albacore) tuna to only 6 ounces per week.
- Leafy greens of the cabbage family. These include broccoli, kale, turnip greens, and collards.
- Legumes. Lima beans and green peas, dry beans and peas, such as pinto beans, black-eyed peas, and canned baked beans.
- Yeast-leavened whole-wheat bread and rolls
- Iron-enriched white bread, pasta, rice, and cereals
Experts recommend all women of childbearing age and all women who are pregnant take vitamin supplements with at least 400 micrograms of folic acid. Folate is the form of folic acid found in food. Good sources are:
- Leafy, dark green vegetables
- Dried beans and peas
- Citrus fruits and juices and most berries
- Fortified breakfast cereals
- Enriched grain products