Childhood Obesity - Do you have an overweight child? We offer tips to help your child lose weight and get fit!

The My Overweight Child blog will help you keep informed about the latest research, findings, and resources available to parents of overweight or obese kids. There are many knowledgeable people working on the increasingly dire problem of childhood obesity - and we want to give parents a place where they can check in regularly to see the latest studies and tips available to help you help your child lose weight and maintain a healthy lifestyle.

We invite you to add your comments - if you have feedback for the blog, would like some specific topics covered, or you just want to share your experience as a parent dealing with childhood obesity.

Obesity More Common in Violent Families

Researchers have established a link between childhood obesity and family violence.

If a child's mother is being abused by her partner, that child is more likely to be obese at age five years old, according to a new study from Boston University School of Medicine.

  • Renee Boynton-Jarrett studied 1595 children born between 1998 and 2000.
  • She tested them at birth and at ages one, three and five-years-old. About half lived in households where their mothers were being abused by their partners.
  • After factoring out other issues such as the hours spent watching television, maternal depression, and smoking during pregnancy,
  • Dr. Boynton-Jarrett found a higher incidence of obesity among five year-olds whose mothers were being abused.

"Intimate partner violence may influence maternal responsiveness to the socio-emotional needs of the child," according to the report published in the Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine. "Witnessing family violence may be associated with emotional distress, and emotion-focused coping using food to self-soothe and address negative emotions."
 

Labels: families, violence, abuse

Posted By: My Overweight Child 1 Comment

Childhood Obesity = Child Abuse?

A couple from Georgia was charged with felony child cruelty, because they were rearing their two children under unhealthy conditions. Their five-year-old daughter weighs 158 pounds and their four-year-old daughter weighs 89 pounds. Average weight for these ages are 35 and 40 pounds respectively.

Although some people may believe that parents of extremely obese children are child abusers, experts say that is not necessarily the case.

Dr. Keith Ayoob, a professor of medicine at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, said that hormonal imbalances or medical conditions such as Prader-Willi Syndrome can cause extreme obesity. He acknowledged that while some children seem to be born with abnormally ravenous appetites, many parents simply feed their children too much food.

"This can happen when mothers are constantly bottle-feeding or if they start solid foods too soon," he said. "They think every time the child cries, the baby is hungry."

Obesity puts children at risk for serious medical conditions such as diabetes, early-onset heart disease, hypertension, knee and joint problems, and psychological issues such as depression.

"Obesity is usually part of a much bigger problem," said Linda Spears, vice president of policy and public affairs at the Child Welfare League of America. "The question is, what is going on with the family that is causing the situation in which you have an obese child with health consequences that are not being addressed."

She and others predict an increase in criminal and child protective services cases involving childhood obesity, because there are more children who are severely overweight.

Labels: parenting, abuse

Posted By: CRC Health 3 Comments