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Community Expecting: Exercise During Pregnancy
Sponsor: Arkansas Children's Hospital Research Institute
Summary
Regular physical activity during pregnancy is safe and offers many health benefits for both mothers and their babies. Research over the past decade shows that exercise can help pregnant women gain a healthy amount of weight, lower their risk of gestational diabetes and high blood pressure, and reduce stress, anxiety, and symptoms of postpartum depression. Babies also benefit when their mothers are active, with lower risks of preterm birth, unhealthy birth size, and childhood obesity. Despite this strong evidence, very few exercise programs for pregnant women have been tested in real-world community settings, such as fitness centers, community health programs, or local organizations. Even fewer studies explain how these programs were delivered or what helped them succeed. Without this information, it is difficult for communities and health programs to offer exercise support that is both effective and practical for pregnant women. To address this gap, the research team adapted an evidence-based program called EXPECTING so it could be delivered by community organizations. Previous participants and community advisors helped to understand what changes were needed to make the program easier to offer while still keeping it safe and effective. The core parts of the program, including the type, amount, and intensity of aerobic and strength-building exercises, remained the same and are based on established pregnancy exercise guidelines. The adapted program, called COMMUNITY EXPECTING, includes both aerobic exercise and resistance training. The research team also developed specific supports to help community instructors deliver the program consistently and with confidence. All program components have already been tested in community settings and shown to be realistic, acceptable, and delivered as planned. This study will examine whether offering a structured exercise program in community settings helps pregnant women be more physically active than usual prenatal care alone. We will also assess whether the program can be delivered successfully and in a way that works for both participants and community providers. The results will help determine whether COMMUNITY EXPECTING is a practical approach for supporting healthy pregnancies in real-world settings.
Official title: Community Expecting: Exercise During Pregnancy for Sedentary Women With Obesity
Key Details
Gender
FEMALE
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
228
Start Date
2025-05-30
Completion Date
2031-07-01
Last Updated
2026-01-15
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Community Expecting
our team adapted EXPECTING for community delivery through extensive input from prior participants and community advisors using an implementation science framework. In our prior project plan, the EXPECTING intervention was successfully adapted to community settings and tested for its acceptability, feasibility and fidelity using the Replicating Effective Programs (REP) strategy8 with input from diverse community partners. This process resulted in 4 key adaptations to define the COMMUNITY EXPECTING Intervention and 3 implementation strategies to support its uptake in the community. Dose, frequency, type, and targeted exertion during exercise were retained as core components from the original EXPECTING study. All intervention components have been tested in the community.
Locations (1)
Arkansas Children's Research Institute
Little Rock, Arkansas, United States