Abstract
Pre-pregnancy body mass index and weight gain management are associated with pregnancy outcomes in expecting women. Poor gestational weight gain (GWG) management could increase the risk of adverse complications. These risks can be alleviated by lifestyle based interventions if undesired GWG trend is detected early on in the pregnancy. Current literature lacks analysis of gestational weight gain data and tracking the pregnancy over time. In this work, we collected longitudinal gestational weight gain data from women during their pregnancy and model their weight measurements to predict the end-of-pregnancy weight gain and classify it in accordance with the medically recommended guidelines. The measurement frequency of the weights is often very variable such that segments of data can be missing and the need to predict early utilising few data points complicates data modelling. We propose a Bayesian approach to forecast weight gain while effectively dealing with the limited data availability for early prediction. We validate on diverse populations from Europe and China. We show that utilising individual’s data only up to mid-way through the pregnancy, our approach produces mean absolute errors of 2.45 kgs and 2.82 kgs in forecasting end-of-pregnancy weight gain on these populations respectively, whereas the best of state-of- the-art yields 8.17 and 6.60 kgs on respective populations. The proposed method can serve as a tool to keep track of individual’s pregnancy and achieve GWG goals, thus supporting the prevention of excessive or insufficient weight gain during pregnancy.
Highlights
In this increasingly obesogenic society, weight management is a key lifestyle-related condition that affects people of all ages and ethinicities
We evaluate the performance of the described approaches in terms of Mean Absolute Error (MAE) and accuracy of the predicted weight gain against the actual end-of-pregnancy weight gain
We present performance measures for early prediction by taking day ‘140’ as the early threshold as it is mid-way through the pregnancy
Summary
In this increasingly obesogenic society, weight management is a key lifestyle-related condition that affects people of all ages and ethinicities. One of the most important demographic groups affected by this is pregnant women. 47% of the pregnant women gain too much weight over the gestational period and around 23% tend to gain too little weight during. With only 30% of the women in the normal weight category after pregnancy [1], most of the women do not follow the guidelines or realize too late in the pregnancy that an intervention or control of the weight gain is necessary.
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