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your search for "eating" yielded 66 results
Eating for a Healthy Pregnancy
Choosing a healthy pregnancy diet goes beyond just avoiding mercury and alcohol! It's critical to ensure that you get satisfactory pregnant...
Expert : Kendra Coppey
Eating Fish While Pregnant (Mercury)
Mercury levels in fish are expressed in terms of parts per million (ppm), which is equivalent to 1 part mercury per 1 million parts fish (1 ...
Contributor : The National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Pregnancy Health: Eating for Two
Eating healthy foods is more important now than ever! You need more protein, iron, calcium, and folic acid than you did before pregnancy.
Contributor : Office On Women's Health (OWH)
Pregnancy: The Safe Stuff to Eat
Want to know what foods to eat during pregnancy? These safe foods - like chocolate - are a great part of your safe pregnancy diet. So watc...
Expert : Dr. Marsha Silberstein
Listeriosis: Diagnosis, Symptoms, and Treatment
A person with listeriosis has fever, muscle aches, and sometimes gastrointestinal symptoms such as nausea or diarrhea.
Contributor : CDC
Mercury Intake and Non-Diet Mercury Sources
People can be exposed to mercury by breathing in air, eating food, or drinking water contaminated with mercury compounds.
Contributor : The National Institutes of Health (NIH)
5 Pregnancy Diet Tips
Eat breakfast every day. If you feel sick to your stomach when you first wake up, choose dry whole-wheat or whole-grain toast-even before yo...
Contributor : The National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Pregnancy Precautions: Mercury
A well-balanced diet that includes a variety of fish and shellfish can contribute to heart health and children's proper growth and developme...
Contributor : Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Foods to Avoid While Pregnant
Certain foods and beverages can harm your baby if you eat or drink them while you are pregnant.
Contributor : The National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Pregnancy Diet: Having A Balanced Diet
A pregnant woman needs more of many important vitamins, minerals, and nutrients than she did before pregnancy.
Contributor : Office On Women's Health (OWH)




