above 5.5 lbs.
Being healthy means good body muscles and healthy diet. A healthy person is the one who has the idea weight as per his weight and he takes balanced diet to maintain his weight.
A healthy baby ranges from 17-26 pounds, and 27.6-31.5 inches.
it depends on your height aswell.
Ok, she is healthy and will give birth to healthy kits. There is nothing to worry about, that is normal :)
The Birth Control itself does not have any ingredients in it that make you gain weight. The birth control makes you crave food and its the food you eat that makes you gain weight. So when you crave the food go for something healthy to eat such as fruit.
There is no such thing as an adult peacock having a weight at birth. If you mean a baby peacock at birth it ranges from many different types of numbers. Hope this helps:)
It is quite simple. It means that a woman is giving birth to a healthy male baby.
A BMI of 18.5 is on the low end of the healthy weight range.
noit can't it just mean's you will lose weight
The average baby looses some weight after birth, but at one month a weight of 10 pounds would be considered healthy. A baby girl will often weigh a bit less than a boy, averaging about a pound less.
Most OB/GYN Doctors recommend that pregnant women that are of healthy weight for height should only gain about 25 pounds during their entire pregnancy. This ensures that the mother does not gain more weight than is necessary for a healthy offspring. Gaining too little weight can result in a Low Birth Weight of the baby. Gaining too much can result in a heavier than normal Birth Weight for the baby. In order to gain the recommended amount of weight, or maintain a healthy weight, the mother should eat a well balanced meal and continue to do some light exercises. You may visit the following website for some ideas on exercises that are safe to do while pregnant. http://www.americanpregnancy.org/pregnancyhealth/toprecommendedexercises.html
The mean birth weight in grams was 3,316 for 2004 according to this CDC report http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr55/nvsr55_01.pdf