Nearly 1 in 5 Children Are Obese

Posted by admin on April 8th, 2009

Is your child obese? If so then the first step is for the parents to acknowledge that the child is overweight, instead of making excuses or comparing him or her to heavier children. Many of the parents of obese children are overweight themselves, which makes that acknowledgment difficult, said Michael Rich, an associate professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School who is also director of the Center on Media and Child Health at Children’s Hospital in Boston.

“The expectations, lifestyle, behaviors are different on a cultural and socioeconomic basis,” he said. “Kids who live in the inner city, whose neighborhoods are perceived as dangerous, stay at home more, sit more, eat more snacks, because that’s all they can get at the local bodega. There are no supermarkets to get produce. That’s what mom is eating, so that’s what kid is eating. What we’re dealing with here is whole life issues.”

“While it’s important to focus on it and take it seriously, it’s also important not to give up or feel hopeless,” he said. “Then you won’t try. You want to look at it for what it is and not be defeated by it.”

When you’re trying to help your child achieve a healthy weight, remove the stigma attached to obesity.

“It should always be about health, not about losing weight,” Rich said. “You’re trying to build the positive.”
Health Library

* MayoClinic.com: Obesity
* MayoClinic.com: Childhood obesity

He recommended the 5-2-1-0 plan. Eat at least five servings of fruits and vegetables, cut screen time down to two hours or less, exercise at least one hour, and have zero soda and sugary drinks.

Such changes, which are not seismic shifts to lifestyles, can help the child get into a health weight.

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