Walking promotion in healthy pregnant women and perinatal outcomes: a multivariate analysis comparing active and sedentary mothers
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Benito Villena, Rebeca; Cano Ibáñez, Naomi; Gallardo Vera, Andrea; Mozas Moreno, Juan; Saeed Khan, Khalid; Puertas Prieto, Alberto; Amezcua Prieto, María Del CarmenEditorial
Taylor & Francis
Materia
Walking promotion Caesarean delivery Physical activity in pregnancy
Fecha
2026-02-16Referencia bibliográfica
Rebeca Benito-Villena , Naomi Cano-Ibáñez, Andrea Gallardo-Vera , Juan Mozas-Moreno, Khalid Saeed Khan , Alberto Puertas-Prieto & Carmen Amezcua-Prieto (2026) Walking promotion in healthy pregnant women and perinatal outcomes: a multivariate analysis comparing active and sedentary mothers, Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 46:1, 2628117. https://doi.org/10.1080/01443615.2026.2628117
Patrocinador
Instituto de Salud Carlos III co-funded by the European Union - (PI23/01866)Resumen
Background: regular physical activity during pregnancy is associated with important
maternal health benefits, yet the specific impact of walking on labour and neonatal
outcomes remains unclear. Although walking is the most common form of exercise
among pregnant women, evidence linking walking levels to obstetric and neonatal
results is still limited. We aim to explore the relationship between walking activity level
in the third trimester of pregnancy (t3) and obstetric and neonatal outcomes.
Methods: this was a secondary analysis of the Walking_Preg Project (WPP) randomised
clinical trial registered in the U.s. National Library of Medicine trials registry (https://
clinicaltrials.gov/study/Nct03735381). Participants were healthy, low-risk pregnant
women who were not previously physically active. they were given pedometers and
physical activity recommendations. the sample was classified at t3 as physically active
(≥7,500 steps/day) or sedentary (<7,500 steps/day) according to tudor-Locke and
bassett’s index to classify pedometer-determined physical activity in healthy adults.
Multivariate analyses were conducted to compare obstetric and neonatal outcomes
between active and sedentary women.
Results: 41 pregnant women walked at least 7,500 steps per day in t3, while 137 did not
reach that activity level. the crude and adjusted multivariate models showed an inverse
relationship between walking ≥7,500 steps/day in t3 and unplanned caesarean delivery
(adjusted Or 0.27, 95% ci 0.05–1.47) as well as a positive relationship with induction of
labour (adjusted Or 1.10, 95% ci 0.46–2.61) and neonatal weight (adjusted b coef =
97.55, 95% ci −64.03-259.14; p = 0.23). However, statistical significance was not reached.
Conclusions: in this secondary analysis, no statistically significant associations were
observed between walking activity during the third trimester and obstetric or neonatal
outcomes. Given the low adherence to the walking program and the exploratory nature
of the analysis, these findings should be interpreted with caution and require
confirmation in larger, adequately powered studies.





