We support the World Health Organisation’s recommendation for exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of life and continued breastfeeding along with the introduction of nutritionally adequate and safe complementary (solid) foods at 6 months together with continued breastfeeding up to two years of age and beyond.

What happens in my 2nd month of pregnancy?

Congratulations! You’ve now entered weeks 7 to 10 of your pregnancy. There are some amazing milestones this month, so let’s look at what foods you should be eating to give your developing baby the strength and nutrients to make his first movements and help the development of neurons in his brain.

Weeks 7 to 10 sees your developing baby moving actively

Your developing baby might be only two inches (five centimeters) long, but he’s undergoing some amazing changes during the second month of pregnancy. Even though he’s only about the size of your little finger, he now has tiny hands, feet, arms and legs. At around nine weeks, he’s started to move in your womb, and can bring his hand up to his mouth. These first movements involve his whole body, but by month three he will be able to move individual limbs.

How do you help support your developing baby's strength to move?

While you may not look or even feel pregnant yet, now is the time to help your developing baby achieve all those crucial milestones in his body’s development. That means making well-balanced food choices, especially since he’s eating what you consume! 

Having a balanced diet that contains the essential nutrients your unborn child needs, is the key to a healthy pregnancy. Try to eat plenty of fruit and vegetables, lean meat or protein such as fish and eggs, and avoid fatty foods, alcohol and raw foods like sushi1. 

Doctors recommend taking a multivitamin with at least 400 µg (0.4 mg) of folic acid per day before you even conceive and continue to do so throughout your pregnancy. In addition to helping protect against birth defects, folic acid promotes healthy cell division and nourishes your unborn child's developing nervous system2. 

Bananas are a great natural food that are packed with B group vitamins and folate that your developing baby needs for spinal development. One banana delivers around 12% of your daily needs3– more folate than any other commonly eaten fruit. 

A daily multivitamin containing 16 to 20 mg of iron, essential for red blood cell production, will help you have a healthy pregnancy3. Do check with your doctor or dietitian that your multivitamin contains the right amount of iron for you. Be sure to include iron-rich foods in your daily diet like beef, eggs, dried beans and chickpeas, as well as almonds and cashews. 

With your unborn child needing so many essential nutrients for his well-rounded development, it might just be time to start a daily menu planner to keep track of your developing baby’s growing nutritional needs.  

Did you know: 2nd Month of Pregnancy 

Although your unborn child’s sex was determined at the time of his conception, his sex-differentiating hormones are released during the second month of life and he begins to develop sex organs. 

What’s happening to my child’s mental & physical development in the 2nd month of pregnancy?

It’s also a remarkable time for your unborn child’s intellectual and sensory growth. During this period, his brain, spinal cord, nervous system and backbone are all being created and the heart and circulatory system are developing too. 

In the first 16 to 18 weeks of your developing baby’s life, his brain will create around 100 billion neurons. These neurons are the brain’s basic building blocks. Your developing baby’s feeling, breathing and, eventually, actions like walking, are made possible because these cells communicate with each other.4 

Eating a well balanced diet at this stage of your pregnancy is one way you can help your developing baby grow and successfully reach all those milestones he’ll need to meet in the coming months. That means your prenatal nutrition should include adequate amounts of Vitamin D, folic acid and DHA (an omega-3 fat that helps your unborn child’s brain and eye development).3,5,6 

  

Your unborn child is also developing taste buds and will continue to do so in the third month of your pregnancy. To find out how you can help him develop his taste for well-balanced foods, read more about Pregnancy stages: Month 3

  

Missed out on last month’s pregnancy milestones? You can track how far you and your developing baby have come in Pregnancy stages: Month 1

  

Want to learn more about how your developing baby will develop over your pregnancy – plus, nutritional advice, online support and more? Then sign up for Enfamama A+ Club to receive new articles, useful tips and rewards that can help you and your developing baby! 

  

Your pregnancy is a time of great changes and new beginnings. To help you maximize your time, download Enfamama A+ Mobile App. It allows you to document your journey, get top tips and advice on gestational milestones and a healthy pregnancy. 

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