Do you feel you lack a firm understanding of how to comprehensively treat pregnant and postpartum athletes? Maybe you don’t feel confident in knowing how to modify activity for this population, or you feel that most high-intensity activity should be ceased during pregnancy and early postpartum.
If this is you, might I encourage you to take our upcoming course on special considerations for Pregnant and Postpartum High-Intensity Athletes?
While this patient population is like the general population in many ways, there is a certain nuance in evaluating pregnant and postpartum athletes. This is especially true for elite or high-intensity athletes. Considering the demands of many of these high-intensity sports (running, powerlifting, CrossFit, Orange Theory) it is imperative that pelvic therapists also understand orthopedics, and vice versa. In bridging this gap between specialties, we have the opportunity to optimize performance, while ensuring our patients also remain healthy.
Emily McElrath, PT, DPT, MTC, CIDN is instructing her upcoming course Pregnancy & Postpartum Considerations For High Intensity Athletics scheduled on March 9, 2024. Emily is highly trained in Sports and Orthopedics and has a passion for helping women achieve optimal sports performance and is certified in manual therapy and dry needling, which allows her to provide a wide range of treatment skills including joint and soft tissue mobilization. She is an avid runner and CrossFitter and has personal experience modifying these activities during pregnancy and postpartum.
It’s no secret that high intensity exercise during pregnancy and early postpartum has been debated for years. For many decades, pregnant female athletes have been told things like “you shouldn’t be doing that,” or “that’s not safe.” Are these claims rooted in truth or misunderstanding? I personally think more of the latter, and as it turns out the research supports that as well. In fact, the entire narrative around high intensity exercise in pregnancy seems to be shifting.
Emily McElrath, PT, DPT, MTC, CIDN is instructing her upcoming course Pregnancy & Postpartum Considerations For High Intensity Athletics scheduled on May 21, 2023. This one-day remote continuing education course is designed to educate practitioners on the unique considerations of pregnant and postpartum athletes engaging in high intensity interval training (HIIT).
Emily is a native of New Orleans and received her undergraduate degree in Athletic Training at the University of Southern Mississippi and went on to receive her Doctorate of Physical Therapy from the University of St. Augustine for Health Sciences. She is highly trained in Sports and Orthopedics and has a passion for helping women achieve optimal sports performance. Emily is certified in manual therapy and dry needling, which allows her to provide a wide range of treatment skills including joint and soft tissue mobilization. She is an avid runner and Cross-fitter and has personal experience modifying these activities during pregnancy and postpartum.
Introduction: Although routine exercise has long been recommended throughout pregnancy by medical professionals, High Intensity Athletics like Crossfit, weightlifting, and HIIT have received mixed approval amongst healthcare providers. There seems to be limited knowledge on how this form of exercise affects the pelvic floor and abdominal wall throughout pregnancy and postpartum, thus creating a limited understanding of proper recommendations by healthcare providers in regard to how and when a patient can safely continue and/or return to high intensity athletics during pregnancy and postpartum. Unfortunately, some (likely well-intended) medical professionals have gone so far as to instruct their patients to completely avoid these types of exercise throughout pregnancy. But are these limitations really necessary? Does the research support these recommendations? Or is there a way we can help these women continue to safely participate in high intensity athletics throughout pregnancy, and return appropriately in the postpartum phase?