The rules aren’t one-size-fits-all
For years, health groups like the IOM and WHO set standard ranges: 25 to 35 pounds for women at a normal weight, more for underweight women, less for those overweight. These numbers shaped care worldwide.
But here’s the twist. The new data shows these rules may not work equally everywhere. In low- and middle-income countries, the risks tied to weight gain are often stronger. Gaining too much or too little has a bigger impact than in wealthier nations.
Think of it like fuel in a car. A luxury SUV can handle extra weight without much trouble. But a small economy car struggles with the same load. In the same way, a woman’s body in a resource-limited setting may be less able to handle shifts in weight.
The body uses nutrients like building blocks. During pregnancy, it directs energy to grow the baby, support the placenta, and prepare for birth. When food or medical care is scarce, even small changes in weight can throw off this balance. Gaining too little may mean the baby doesn’t get enough. Gaining too much may overload a system already under stress.
Big data, clear patterns
The findings come from a large review of 17 studies, covering more than 866,000 pregnant women across the globe. All used standard guidelines to define “adequate,” “excessive,” or “inadequate” weight gain.
Women who gained too much were more likely to have a C-section. They faced double the risk of preeclampsia, a dangerous rise in blood pressure. Their babies were more than twice as likely to be large for gestational age (LGA) or weigh over 8 pounds, 13 ounces at birth—a condition called macrosomia.
But gaining too much did not raise the risk of preterm birth. That surprised some experts.
On the other side, women who gained too little had a 45% higher risk of delivering early. Their babies were less likely to be large, but more likely to be born too soon. These women were also less likely to need a C-section or deliver a very big baby.
But there’s a catch.
That's not the full story. The risks were not the same everywhere. In developing countries, the links were stronger. For example, too much gain led to even higher odds of C-section or preeclampsia than in wealthier nations.
Experts say this could be due to diet, access to care, or baseline health. A woman starting pregnancy undernourished may react differently to weight gain than one who starts well-fed.
This doesn't mean this treatment is available yet.
The results don’t call for one new global rule. Instead, they push for smarter, local ones. What works in Sweden may not work in Senegal. Doctors need tools that reflect real life—where a woman lives, what she eats, how she’s monitored.
For pregnant women today, this means your care should be personal. Talk to your provider about your weight gain. Share your full health history. Ask how your background and community might shape your needs.
Right now, no new guidelines are in place. The current ones are still used. But this research adds strong evidence that change may be needed—especially in parts of the world where moms and babies face the highest risks.
The review has limits. Most data still comes from high-income countries. Few studies tracked diet, activity, or social stress—factors that shape weight and health. And all relied on standard cutoffs that may not capture the full picture.
What happens next? Researchers are calling for more studies in low-resource areas. The goal is to build better tools—ones that use local data to guide care. It may take years to update global advice. But this study marks a shift. Weight gain in pregnancy is not just a number. It’s a signal shaped by context, care, and community.