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Tips to Beat Morning Sickness
Morning sickness can come at any time during the day - not just in the morning. There are many things that trigger morning sickness, and many things you can do to help prevent or alleviate the nausea and vomiting.
Few women experience severe symptoms of morning sickness (also known as hyperemesis gravidarum). Most symptoms of morning sickness go away after a few weeks, but if they persist for longer, are severe (you can't keep anything down for longer than one hour), and debilitating, call your obstetrician or visit an emergency room immediately. You can become quickly dehydrated and may require an IV to replace fluids lost during vomiting.
Triggers that may cause morning sickness
Smells and odors (such as food, pet, body odor, fragrances, deodorants, garbage, fuel, paint)
Fatigue (especially if you were up all night vomiting)
Areas or rooms with stale, damp air
Foods (especially greasy or spicy)
Empty stomach (accumulated acid in stomach)
Noises (sudden noise, loud music, traffic, sirens, construction sites)
Abrupt, sudden movements (motion sickness)
Bright, glaring lights
Hot/cold weather, humidity
Morning sickness remedies
Eat small, frequent meals high in protein and fiber. Avoid fatty, rich, or spicy foods. Fatty foods take longer to digest (and your digestion is slow enough already!) and bland foods tend to be easier on your stomach.
Get plenty of rest (take naps during the day or when you feel most nauseated).
Keep bag of snack foods (unsalted pretzels, nuts, granola bars, dried fruit, breadsticks, crackers) with you at all times to keep your stomach comfortable
Chew Tums or other safe antacids when nauseated or after vomiting.
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