Supplements for Pregnancy & Nursing: What I Take

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Wellness Mama » Blog » Health » Supplements for Pregnancy & Nursing: What I Take

I often get comments and questions asking about the supplements for pregnancy and while nursing that I take. I talk about the prenatal care options I choose in this post, but wanted to write about the specific pregnancy supplements I take.

Important Note

These are the supplements I chose to take after consulting with my doctor, thyroid specialist and midwife. I share these for informational purposes only and not in any way as a suggestion of medical advice. This post is strictly informational and should only serve as a starting point for a conversation between you and your medical provider about the best supplements for pregnancy in your specific case.

Why Supplements for Pregnancy?

Pregnancy and nursing are times of a woman’s life when it is important to be vigilant about getting enough nutrients to nourish her little one and supplements can be helpful. There are also some supplements that are important to avoid during pregnancy and nursing and any pregnant woman should work directly with her care provider to make sure she is taking the correct supplements for her body and pregnancy.

As someone who has quite a bit of experience being pregnant and nursing over the last decade, I’ve seen first hand how supplements can make a pregnancy (and delivery) easier!

Each woman’s dietary and nutrient needs will vary, but as a general rule, a nutrient-dense diet is the most important factor in her ability to get enough vitamins and minerals during pregnancy and supplements can’t take the place of a healthy diet and good lifestyle habits.

When I am pregnant, I focus on consuming the following:

  • Lots of high quality protein from high quality sources like grass-fed beef, free-range poultry and eggs, and wild, caught, sustainable seafood (smaller fish preferable). Organ meats from grass fed sources are also wonderful for pregnancy and nursing and can help reduce the chance of anemia.
  • Large amounts of vegetables, especially green ones! Green veggies have folate, which is important for fetal growth, and are also high in many other nutrients. They help prevent the constipation that can sometimes occur during pregnancy, and are great for making sure nursing moms are getting enough vitamins. During pregnancy, I live by the motto of “When in doubt, eat more veggies.”
  • Healthy Fats galore! Pregnancy and nursing are not times to skimp on healthy fats. Quality fats are absolutely vital for baby’s brain development, organ and tissue growth, and good milk production for mom. Sources like healthy meats, coconut oil and coconut products, olive oil, avocados, and nuts are especially good during pregnancy.
  • Other high nutrient foods like homemade bone broth, soups, fermented vegetables like homemade sauerkraut, fruit (especially berries) and green smoothies are also great for pregnancy and nursing.

Supplements for Pregnancy

Even with the most solid diet, it can be difficult to consume enough of the necessary nutrients for pregnancy, especially with our modern food supply. For this reason, I take certain specially selected supplements while I am pregnant or nursing:

Folate

The supplement folic acid is commonly recommended, but there is substantial difference between folic acid (the synthetic form) and folate (the natural form). This article explains the difference in detail. The dosage is also slightly different, and some sources recommend as much as 1200 mcg of folate per day for maximum benefit. This amount should include the amount in multivitamins and any additional folate supplement (be sure to check multivitamins, as many contain the synthetic form!). Folate is one supplement that has been extensively studied for use in pregnancy and is extremely effective at preventing neural tube defects. It is also very inexpensive and easy for every pregnant woman to take.

NOTE: People who have a MTHFR defect will need to consult with a specialized practitioner and will probably need to take L-5-MTHF which is the methylated form of folate. I explain more in this post.

Prenatal Multivitamin

There is some debate on if a full multivitamin prenatal is necessary during pregnancy or not. While I don’t routinely take a multivitamin, pregnancy and nursing is one time that I do. A deficiency in a vitamin or mineral won’t make a tremendous, immediate impact on an adult in most cases, but during the intensive developmental phases of pregnancy, a nutrient deficiency can have lasting consequences for baby.

A high quality prenatal is an “insurance policy” or sorts to guard against deficiencies but should accompany a high nutrient diet! Many prenatals contain iron, though this isn’t necessary if you are consuming red meat from healthy sources and organ meats. Just make sure it doesn’t contain folic acid (but folate or methyl folate). This is the brand I use.

Probiotics

Probiotics are critical, especially during pregnancy. During the birth process, babies culture their beneficial gut bacteria from what the receive from mom when passing through the birth canal and from nursing in the months afterward. Unfortunately, this process doesn’t happen in the same way with cesarean deliveries, but research is finding ways to help facilitate this process.

Quality probiotics (Probiotics) help ensure that baby will get a good dose of beneficial bacteria during a normal vaginal delivery, which can reduce risk of ear infection and illness in the first few years. Good gut health also has a tremendous impact on lifelong health, and this is one of the most important things you can do for your baby’s health. Probiotics also help mom avoid illness and constipation during pregnancy, and might reduce the risk of Group B strep. Since baby’s gut bacteria continues to culture during the nursing time, it is good for mom to continue to take probiotics during this time as well.

Vitamin D3

There is a lot of emerging research that Vitamin D can help reduce the risk of many pregnancy related complications including gestational diabetes. It is important for baby’s bone and hormone development and helps support mom’s immune system during pregnancy. Some research suggests that nursing babies may be able to obtain Vitamin D from the mother’s milk if mom is getting more than 5,000IU/day. I take 5,000 IU/day while pregnant or nursing, unless I’m able to get 30 minutes or more of midday sun.

When supplementing, I only take Vitamin D3 with K2 and I occasionally test blood levels of vitamin D to make sure my levels don’t get too high.

Magnesium

I take magnesium all the time, but find it especially helpful in pregnancy. Severe magnesium deficiency can lead to poor fetal growth, preeclampsia, or even fetal death. Proper magnesium levels also help mom’s tissue growth and recovery during pregnancy and may help baby receive more nutrition through the placenta. It is very difficult to get enough magnesium from food sources anymore, so I typically use magnesium oil on the skin, or an ionic supplement. As a general rule, I don’t exceed 500 mg from all sources unless advised by my doctor.

Coconut Oil

During pregnancy and nursing, I take several tablespoons of coconut oil and other healthy fats in smoothies or tea daily as a supplement in addition to cooking with it. It is naturally immune boosting, supportive of baby’s brain development, and contains many of the components of breast milk to support nursing as well.

Third Trimester Pregnancy Tea

In the third trimester, I add in Red Raspberry Leaf Pregnancy Tea (here’s the recipe). There is some limited research that Red Raspberry Leaf may increase the strength of contractions without increasing the pain and that it may shorten labor. While scientific studies are limited, there is an abundance of anecdotal evidence from women who swear that RRL helped shorten their labors or make it easier.

I personally mix RRL with with herbs and drink as a tea in third trimester because it is refreshing and an easy way to sneak in some extra nutrients since I’m already trying to consume more fluids.

Things I Avoid

Just as deficiency of some things can be dangerous during pregnancy, consumption or contact with other things can be harmful to a developing baby. In general, these are things I avoid during pregnancy (and all the time- not a complete list… do your own research):

Did you take supplements during pregnancy? Are you pregnant now? Share below!

Sources

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Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

399 responses to “Supplements for Pregnancy & Nursing: What I Take”

  1. nikki Avatar

    Hi, Thank you for your prenatal vitamin recommendation. Upon reviewing the reviews on Amazon for this vitamin, it was brought to my attention that this brand has a very high amount of Vit E- some say it is a dangerous amount for a developing fetus. Any thoughts on this? I’d like to pick a prenatal soon because Im already pregnant. Thanks!

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar

      I’d ask your doc to be sure. My doctor and midwife were both fine with that brand because of the ratios of E to other fat soluble vitamins, but I’d definitely check with yours. Congrats on your pregnancy!

  2. Molly Avatar

    Hi Wellness Mama! I am nursing right now and have continued to take my prenatals while doing so, but realized after reading your post that I am taking one that has folic acid instead of folate. I am also taking Coconut oil and vitamin D, but am not taking the other supplements you mentioned. My question for you is if you stop using any of the supplements while nursing (such as the extra folate) or if you add any extra while nursing. I also am wondering if you supplement your baby with vitamin d drops or if the baby gets enough from your milk since you are taking 5000iu.
    Thank you!!

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar

      I don’t worry as much about folate while nursing as I do during pregnancy and I don’t supplement baby directly with anything, including D, unless blood tests show that I need to.

  3. Dana Avatar

    Hi wellness mama, I do have one more question as I was looking to buy some of these supplements since I am nursing.. The multivitamin you show has 2000 icu for vit D and the vit D drops has 1000 for two drops .. So how do you get your 5000 in? Do you just take extra drops? Also if I take the multivitamin and the folate supplement it adds up to be 1600 and it said in post to do 1500… Just wanna make sure I’m doing too much … Thanks for any help

  4. Alissa Avatar

    Hi Katie, do you have any recommendations for dads, prior to conception? I’ve heard that what a dad consumes in the three months prior to conception is just as important as what the mum eats for the whole nine months.

  5. Dana Avatar

    Hi, just wondering if there is another brand of multivitamin you would recommend taking that bobsleds expensive?…

  6. Sarah Avatar

    I am wondering about probiotics. Is it okay to take them as a supplement all the time? I have heard that it isn’t, but so many bloggers are recommending to take them all the time in and out of pregnancy. Isn’t eating a lot of probiotic foods enough (kefir, kombucha, sauerkraut, etc.)? I have heard there is more beneficial bacteria in a teaspoon of homemade sauerkraut than a whole bottle of probiotics. I’m just wondering why you would then need to supplement too?

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar

      I do it to increase the diversity of my gut bacteria and to make sure that I have an abundance of bacteria to pass on to my baby, as well as to crowd out anything less than savory, like GBS (dangerous to baby) or yeast (which you are more prone to in pregnancy). Healthy fermented foods are definitely great, and I consume those as well, but probiotic supplements can be targeted since they contain very specific strains of bacteria.

      1. Sarah Avatar

        Thanks for clarifying :). Are there any consequences for taking probiotics supplements long term or would you say that mostly everyone should be doing that?

        1. Wellness Mama Avatar

          I personally wouldn’t just take a single type of probiotics over the long term but do take an alternating regimen of these three to help support gut health. I’d ask a doc to be sure if you are considering doing this too, but I haven’t seen any negative effects from probiotic use.

  7. Molly Avatar

    Hi Katie! I was wondering if you continue to take these same supplements while you’re nursing or if you change anything?

    Thanks in advance!

  8. Brandy Avatar

    I have to say, I have been following your posts for a few years now and always have found them enjoyable and educational. Now that I am an aspiring midwife, I have really been loving your birth stories and these healthy-pregnancy posts. Thank you!

  9. Mary Dresser Avatar
    Mary Dresser

    I see that you didn’t mention the FCLO in your post, but it is mentioned in the comments. In light of the new information surrounding its’ production methods, do you currently still consume it daily?

  10. Alissa Avatar

    Hi Katie, thank you so much for this list! My husband & I are just putting together a list of supplements we need so we can budget accordingly. Shipping from amazon to Australia is cost prohibitive, so we usually order from iHerb. I am just wondering if you have an opinion on the Thorne prenatal multi? It contains 500 mcg as Calcium Folinate and 500 mcg as L-5-Methyltetrahydrofolate from L-5-Methyltetrahydrofolic Acid, Glucosamine Salt
    Thanks so much for all the work you do!

  11. Elizabeth Avatar
    Elizabeth

    So taking the Optimal Prenatal by Seeking Health with the red raspberry leaf in it is safe to take in the first trimester?
    I am homozygous C677T MTHFR and am told to take baby aspirin everyday while pregnant. Is there a safer alternative or should I just suck it up? And should I do lovenox too? Would taking fish oil with it be too much of a blood thinner?
    Thanks!

  12. teresa rey Avatar
    teresa rey

    read guts and grease the diet of native americans to has good info . too bad these people will never be able to eat for health easily again and it was all free. we must get there wisdom 50, 000 years built.

  13. Monika Wilkins Avatar
    Monika Wilkins

    Really nice post with all the information. It will be extremely useful for me as my first baby is on the way…

  14. Elena P. Avatar

    I know everyone is concerned about about synthetic folic acid in the prenatal vitamins but please be concerned about the synthetic vitamin c ascorbic acid. It’s a synthetic chemical made from sugar that had been mutated with extremely harsh and powerful toxic chemicals. It’s super cheap to make, that’s why it’s in everything (even so called organic fruit snacks for kids)! It also kills your good bacteria and destroys your needed intestinal flora (all information on the topic, I found at herbdoc.com) It’s so hard to find a multi-vitamin with out this stuff in it! Although, the website I found this information on does sell a good multi-vitamin, I don’t 100% agree on his beliefs (like being a vegan) but I do appreciate his approach on real natural nutrition.

  15. Molly Avatar

    Hi Katie, I just had a quick question. I’m a lot earlier in pregnancy and I really respect your opinions. I’m taking Innate Response prenatal vitamins because they all seem to come from natural sources. You are taking the Optimal Prenatal. Is that one better than the one I’m taking? Is there something wrong with my brand? I’m just curious what your opinion is, you have so much more experience in this area than me!

  16. Kimberly Avatar

    Would you please do an update on the current supplements you take when you aren’t pregnant?
    Thank you!

  17. Val Avatar

    Hi,

    I’m 6 weeks pregnant, and I’m not sure whether to take the pure synergy prenatal or simply a folate from pure encapsulations? Could you recommend something for me? If I understood it right the prenatal is completely whole food based and the folate is synthetic?

  18. Kisa Avatar

    What about the:
    Magnesium (as Albion® DiMagnesium Malate) 250 mg
    Vitamin D (as cholecalciferol) 2000 IU
    Folate [50% as Quatrefolic® ((6S)-5-methyltetrahydrofolate, glucosamine salt) and 50% as folinic acid (calcium folinate)] 800 mcg
    That is already in the multivitamin you suggest? Are they not enough?

  19. caitlin Avatar

    I ordered a prenatal that online claimed that it had folate, when I got the vitamins in the mail the ingredient list states folate (from folic acid)…does this make them bad? I also have the folate pill you have linked above would it be harmful if I would take those on top of my prenatals? We just started trying to get pregnant again so hopefully I’m about two weeks along right now!!

  20. Pam Avatar

    The seeking health Brand is great! I bought it & was to much for me though I couldn’t even take 1 pill without feeling crazy lol. I had to send them back. I got another one with same kind of b-12 & folate , 90 day supply called best nest wellness, found on Amazon, it’s a one a day pill which I’m not crazy about but you can split it up! Was $35/40 I think for 90 days. I like it. There’s also just folate/b-12 that you can take but the best nest or there’s one called zahler that has good folate!! I get it too $60 a month really expensive !!

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