Being an 'Expert' & Defining Boundaries

I really enjoyed hosting a pregnancy / postnatal exercise & nutrition live Q&A on babyexpert.com today! Questions included pelvic floor & post c -section tummy worries (‘is it EVER coming back?!’), as well as PCOS pre-conception fitness concerns & pregnancy weight control with diabetes.

Other experts asked to host chats on babyexpert.com include Zita West, the fertility guru, & so I was flattered to be in such great company! But it also got me thinking about the term ‘expert’, how it is used so sparingly (especially on the web) & the responsibility that goes with that label.

Womens’ pregnancy & postnatal exercise concerns often simply do not seem to be answered succinctly by the ubiquitous pregnancy ‘bibles’ (mine was Yehudi Gordon which I swore by!… what was yours?), or even by doctors & midwives. This is perfectly reasonable since none of these are specifically focussed on that subject matter. Your doctor & midwife are of course utterly fundamental to your wellbeing & safety during pregnancy & birth, but they’re not necessarily up to date or experts in the latest exercise research.

As a pregnancy personal trainer, I need to be very clear about my boundaries. My team & I NEVER cross the line into giving medical or obstetric advice. We’re not childbirth or parenting experts, we’re not antenatal teachers or trained counsellors.

I do know quite a lot about childbirth (especially when it goes off childbirth plan :-0), a little (very little!) about parenting, a fair amount about breastfeeding (my wisdom here goes thus : stick it out for 3 weeks & it stops hurting) & hopefully am pretty experienced & knowledgeable when dealing with the hormonal rollercoaster of pregnancy & motherhood…

…My point being, I know about as much, & as little,  as every other mother out there.

I am very clear however about my ‘expert’ status.

My expertise is in physical exercise throughout pregnancy & beyond – for fitness, strength, fat loss, flexibility, core & postural restoration, as well as alleviating pain & discomfort. I have a sound technical knowledge of, and & can advise on, optimum nutrition for pregnancy, breastfeeding & postnatal weight control.

General guidelines are a good starting point, but fears about exercise causing miscarriage;  ‘how much weight gain is too much?’;  ‘how long will it take to lose it?’; ‘how hard, how often & for how long should I exercise?’; exercise to make pregnancy, SPD & back ache more comfortable & controlling weight gain in pregnancy are all clearly still big concerns.

These are the questions I can answer.

I think you want straight talking, facts & strategies that work…  NOT generic, vague advice, unrealistic  regimes or value judgements. Am I on the right track? Do the answers like those given on the webchat today & on this blog help? I hope so – but please let me know either way!!

Related Posts with Thumbnails

Comments

  1. Hi, is there any way of getting the Q&A as a download, I can’t seem to find a link at the site you link to.
    It sounds really interesting.

    Thank you

    Gloris
    Gloria@weight loss pregnancy´s last blog ..Postpartum Weight Loss My ComLuv Profile

  2. wendy says:

    Hi Gloria, the link does work I think – you just have to scroll down the page a bit… There is also a link to it from the ‘No More Excuses in the Press’ page. Let me know if you can’t find it!
    wendy´s last blog ..The No More Mummy Tummy Diet. Yes I Know. You Know. My ComLuv Profile

Speak Your Mind

*

CommentLuv Enabled