goto Indian Health Service home page  Indian Health Service:  The Federal Health Program for American Indians and Alaska Natives

 
IHS HOME ABOUT IHS SITE MAP HELP
goto Health and Human Services home page goto Health and Human Services home page

Diabetes in Pregnancy - Part 2 Management, Delivery and Postpartum

Contact Us

MCH Website Administrator

Required Plugins

These plug-ins
may be required
for the content
on this page:


Link to Adobe Acrobat Plug-in Acrobat
Link to MicroSoft Word Plug-in MS Word

IHS Plug-in Page

Use site contact
if unable to view
a particular file

Maternal Child

Maternal Child HealthPerinatologist Corner ‹ C.E.U./C.M.E. Modules

Perinatologist Corner - C.E.U/C.M.E. Modules

Diabetes In Pregnancy Series

Sponsored by The Indian Health Service Clinical Support Center

PART 2: Management, delivery, and postpartum

12. Contraception

All contraceptive modalities are appropriate for the woman who has had GDM. Caveats include:

  • estrogen containing combination oral contraceptive agents may increase insulin requirements in the overt diabetic
  • injectable depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (Depo-Provera) may result in undesirable weight gain (Espey et al)
  • very limited retrospective data suggests progestin only contraceptive pills may increase the incidence of glucose intolerance (Kjos et al 1998)

Espey et al studied a cohort of 172 Navajo women who had used DMPA continuously for one or 2 years comprised the study group. A cohort of 134 Navajo women who used a non-progestin method or no method over 1 or 2 years comprised the comparison group. Study subjects gained a mean of 6 pounds over one year and 11 pounds over 2 years relative to the comparison group (p < 0.001) after controlling for possible confounding variables including age, parity and initial weight.

Kjos et al 1998 reported a retrospective cohort study of 904 Latinas with GDM who gave birth between January 1987 and March 1994, in whom postpartum diabetes was excluded at 4 to 16 weeks post partum. The report is limited because the patients with progestin only OCs were significantly heavier, significantly higher parity, and significantly higher weight gain in follow-up compared to patients on combination agents.

11. Can diabetes be prevented? ‹ Previous | Next › 13. IHS on-line resources

up arrow Return to top of page

This file last modified: Friday July 6, 2007  1:54 PM