Before Pregnancy
Give your baby the best chance for a healthy start. Prepare your body now before becoming pregnant. Talk to your healthcare provider early to make sure you and your loved ones are prepared. Below are things you can do to support a healthy pregnancy.
Healthcare
- Appointments: Schedule a preconception appointment with your provider to prepare your body for pregnancy. Discuss your overall health, any existing medical problems, current medications (some are not safe when you are pregnant), and family health history.
- Fertility: Ask your provider when you are most fertile, so you know the best time to get pregnant or to avoid becoming pregnant. If you are struggling with infertility, now may be a good time to ask about in vitro fertilization (IVF), intrauterine insemination (IUI), surrogacy, or adoption.
- Genetic counseling: Genetic counseling helps you understand the risks of genetic conditions, provides insights into potential health issues, aids in planning for a healthy pregnancy, and supports informed choices for your family’s future.
- Risk assessment and medical history review: Identifies potential genetic risks and the chances of having a child with a genetic disorder, such as Down Syndrome, which can increase with parental age.
- Carrier testing: Determines if you carry genes for inherited diseases, helping you understand and prepare for potential health risks.
- Decision-making and emotional support: Provides guidance and emotional support through genetic testing, aiding informed choices about family planning and pregnancy.
- Vaccinations: Visit the CDC website to find out what vaccinations to get before, during, and after pregnancy to protect yourself and your child from serious diseases, like whooping cough, flu, COVID-19, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV).
Mental Health
Pregnancy can be an emotional time. It’s important to take care of your mental health and have a support system in place. Below are resources to help.
- Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC)
- Cook County Department of Public Health
- Here to Hear You Campaign – Reminds Cook County residents they can thrive at any stage of their mental health journeys and that they are not alone in the process.
- Illinois Department of Public Health – Postpartum depression information and resources.
- NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness) – Anyone in Cook County can call NAMI Chicago’s Helpline 7 days a week, 833-NAMI-CHI (833-626-4244). This is a free and confidential resource that provides a listening ear, guidance and connection to over 700 social service resources.
- National Maternal Mental Health Hotline (HRSA) – Pregnant or just had a baby? Get free, confidential help, 24/7. Call 1-833-TLC-MAMA (1-833-852-6262).
- Psychology Today – Find pregnancy, prenatal and postpartum therapists in the Chicago area.
Nutrition & Exercise
Eat healthy: Start a balanced diet rich in fruits, whole grains, vegetables and lean proteins.
- Begin taking prenatal vitamins – especially folic acid – up to three months before trying to conceive.
- CDC recommends all people capable of becoming pregnant get 400 micrograms (mcg) of folic acid daily. Getting 400 mcg of folic acid each day helps prevent some serious birth defects called neural tube defects (NTDs).
- There are multiple ways to meet this recommendation. You can get folic acid from supplements, such as vitamins, or from foods where folic acid has been added, such as enriched bread.
- It is also important to have a varied diet with folate-rich foods such as dark green leafy vegetables and beans.
Stay active: Do some light exercise, like walking or swimming, to stay healthy.
Sexual Health
Anyone who is having sex can get sexually transmitted infections (STIs). STIs can be passed to the baby during pregnancy or birth. This can cause serious health problems for your baby.
- Avoid complications: Untreated STIs can lead to issues like early birth or low birth weight.
- Get tested: Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) often have NO symptoms, or can masquerade as other things. You may have an STD and not know it.
- Visit our Don’t Guess, Get a Test campaign website for more information and resources to help you with getting tested and treated, maintaining healthy relationships and practicing safer sex.
- Visit our Syphilis Stops with Me campaign website and download our Syphilis Stops with Me fact sheets:
- Find testing sites near you at:
- Cook County Health
- CDC Get Tested – search by ZIP code
- Testing Sites in Cook County
- Get treated as soon as possible: The sooner you get tested, the sooner you can get treated and avoid problems during pregnancy. Your healthcare provider will advise you on the best treatment options for you.
- Have peace of mind: Knowing your status and your partner’s status will help you feel more relaxed and able to focus on having a healthy pregnancy.
Substance Use
Avoid harmful substances like alcohol, street drugs, marijuana, opioids, caffeine and tobacco, as they can negatively affect your health and the health of your baby.
- Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC) – About substance use during pregnancy.
- Chicago Recovery Alliance
- Get Naloxone Cook County | Cook County Department of Public Health – A website with information about a free, life-saving medication called naloxone that can be used to reverse an opioid overdose.
- FindTreatment.gov – A confidential and anonymous resource for people seeking treatment for mental and substance use disorders. Available in Spanish .
- Illinois Tobacco Quitline
- Live4Lali – A recovery community organization located in Arlington Heights. Phone: 844-584-5254.
- SAMHSA Treatment Hotline : 800-662-HELP (4357) – A free, confidential, 24/7, 365-day-a-year treatment referral and information service (in English and Spanish ) for individuals and families facing mental and/or substance use disorders.
- Unfriend Tobacco: Your Lungs, Your Rules – A tobacco use prevention and cessation campaign about the harmful effects of using flavored vape and other tobacco products and the benefits of quitting.
Updated November 13, 2024, 4:57 PM