Aside from looking bad, an improper posture can lead to pain and other negative long-term effects on your body. Maintaining a proper posture while standing, walking, or sitting is very important for the health of your bones, joints, ligaments, and muscles. Maintaining a proper posture during pregnancy can help avoid common aches and pains, as well as keep the mother and baby more comfortable. Proper Posture helps keep bones, joints, and ligaments aligned so that the muscles are able to work properly, and to avoid misuse, which can lead to pain. Maintaining a proper posture prevents fatigue, strain, overuse, and muscular pain.
During pregnancy, a woman’s posture changes due to different factors:
Growing belly shifts weight forward and alters center of gravity
This may cause under-correction or overcorrection of posture
Hormones cause joints and ligaments to loosen
This may cause incorrect posture due to end range changes
Women may adapt different postures to offset pressure on other joints
Various aches and pains alter how a woman stands and walks
Depending on where the pain is, women may adapt pain avoidance postures
Proper Standing Posture:
Cervical spine has a slight inward curvature with slight chin tuck
Shoulders should be back and aligned
Thoracic spine has a slight outward curvature
Abdominal muscles, pelvic muscles and glutes should be activated to keep back straight
Lumbar spine should have a slight inward curvature
Maintain a neutral spine with a slight pelvic tilt to avoid lower back swaying forward
Keep knees slightly bent and soft
Proper Sitting Posture:
Sit with back straight and shoulders back; avoid slouching
3 spinal curves should be present while sitting (cervical, thoracic, lumbar)
Find neutral spine through proper pelvic tilt
Weight evenly distributed between both hips
Feet flat on floor
If you are having problems with your posture, seeing aphysical therapistfor an evaluation can be very helpful. A physical therapist may help you find the cause of your incorrect posture, which will make correcting the posture more efficient. A physical therapist with provide you with the proper tools, skills, and exercises that can help strengthen your body, maintain a proper posture, and avoid aches and pains.
Wearing a Maternity Belt or Belly Band can help cue you to maintain a proper posture. Wearing a belly band does not replace the need to exercise or to actively find your correct posture, but it will help you keep your core muscles engaged in order to maintain a proper posture once you have attained it.