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.

Doctors Question Effectiveness of Surgery for Obese Teenagers

About one in every 200 Americans who underwent surgery for obesity last year was a teenager, according to statistics from a study done in Oregon. This translates into roughly 1,000 teens that had either laparoscopic adjustable gastric banding or permanent gastric bypass surgery in order to lose weight last year.

Teens experience about half the complications from such surgeries that adults do; however, no one knows if the weight loss achieved through stomach stapling or bypass operations will be permanent. The Legacy Good Samaritan Obesity Institute in Portland, Ore., is tracking patients to determine the long-term results.

Dr. Reginald Washington, a Denver pediatric cardiologist, believes that such surgeries are not the solution. "I don't think this should ever become a common treatment for childhood obesity," he said. "We haven't developed an ideal program for a treatment for childhood obesity."

Dr. Philip Wu, a pediatrician with the Kaiser weight-management initiative, said that the surgeries do not "normalize" childhood obesity. "Kids are not little adults," he said. "We need to know what happens to them ten years down the line. If it's only going to get you one or two or three years, then you backslide - is it worth it?"

Labels: complications, obesity_surgery, gastric_bypass

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Obesity Leads to Increased Problems During Surgery

A recent study from the University of Michigan Health System has found that obese children are more likely than normal-weight children to have problems during surgery. The study, which compared surgical experiences of more than 2,000 children, was published in the March issue of the journal Anesthesiology.
"Nearly 9 percent of obese children experienced difficult mask ventilation, compared with 2 percent of normal-weight children. Seventeen percent of obese children in the study experienced major oxygen desaturation (decreased oxygen in the blood), compared with 9 percent of normal-weight children."
Obese children also had greater occurrences of airway obstructions. Read more at Newswise.com.

Labels: complications, surgeries

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