Your Mineral Needs



Your Baby Today: Pregnancy: Nutrition

Your Mineral Needs

From the Editors of Your Baby Today


Minerals, like vitamins, are essential for a well-balanced diet -- especially when you're pregnant. They keep your body running in tip-top shape. They also are involved in just about every aspect of your growing baby's development. Here's a rundown on these important minerals and what foods are good sources of them.


A Mineral-Rich Diet

As you can see from the following list, minerals are abundant in many of the foods you're already eating on a daily basis. Getting a mineral-rich diet should not be difficult because minerals are widely available in so many foods that you're likely to get what you need. Just stick with a variety of the basic food groups: dairy products; meats, fish, and seafood; whole grain breads and cereals; fruits; and vegetables.

  • Calcium: Dairy products, tofu, and dark green vegetables

  • Chromium: Whole grains, wheat germ, and orange juice

  • Copper: Poultry, fish, meats, soybeans, potatoes, and dark green leafy vegetables

  • Fluoride: Fluoridated water

  • Iodine: Seafood and iodized salt

  • Iron: Meat, raisins, dried apricots, potatoes with their skins, and dried peas and beans

  • Magnesium: Milk, peanuts, bananas, wheat germ, and oysters (eat them cooked only)

  • Manganese: Raisins, spinach, carrots, broccoli, oranges, and peas

  • Molybdenum: Whole grains, beans, and milk

  • Phosphorus: Meats, poultry, fish, dairy products, eggs, whole grains, and nuts

  • Selenium: Dairy products, meats, seafood, and whole grains

  • Zinc: Meats, turkey, wheat germ, eggs, and liver


Prenatal Supplements

Your health-care provider probably has prescribed a prenatal supplement that contains the right mix of vitamins and minerals you will need for pregnancy. This can be a great insurance policy, but it shouldn't take the place of a good diet. Foods contain lots of micronutrients and fiber which you cannot get through a supplement.


The content on these pages is provided as general information only and should not be substituted for the advice of your physician.

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