Is my child obese?
Your healthcare provider uses your child's height and weight to
calculate body mass index (BMI). BMI most accurately shows whether
your child is underweight, normal, or overweight. Your child's BMI
is compared with that of thousands of children of the same age.
This comparison will show what percentile of BMI your child is in.
Overweight is greater than the 85% of BMI for your child's age.
Obese is usually defined as greater than 95% of BMI for your
child's age.
There are so many obese and overweight children that what looks
"normal" may be overweight. Pediatric obesity is a health epidemic
in the US. Roughly 1 out of 8 children in America are overweight
or obese. Almost 1 out of 4 Black and Hispanic children are
overweight. It is a very serious health problem.
Why does it matter?
Being obese puts your child at risk for serious health problems.
These problems include type 2 diabetes, joint problems,
obstructive sleep apnea (a severe snoring disease), severe asthma,
hormone problems, liver disease, and high blood pressure.
Being obese can significantly reduce your child's lifespan.
Obesity dramatically increases the chances of serious adult health
problems such as heart disease, diabetes, cancer, arthritis,
hypertension, and stroke.
Is a chubby child a healthy child?
The latest research shows that two-thirds of obese children age 10
or older will become obese adults. Obesity for many children
starts by the time they are 3 years of age, and needs to be
stopped at that time.
How did this happen?
There are several factors that are thought to increase obesity.
- Increased TV, computer, and video game time
- TV in your child's bedroom is associated with risk of
being overweight.
- The number of hours per day that a child spends watching
TV or playing video games is directly associated with
overweight.
- More TV time is also associated with children having more
snacks and sodas.
- Decreased Exercise
- Time spent playing outside is now spent in front of TV.
- Many schools do not provide gym classes for all kids.
- Many communities do not have parks, recreation centers, or
swimming pools.
- Fat and Sugar in the Diet
- For many kids, too many calories come from fat and sugar
in foods. Fats and sugars are added by many manufacturers
for flavor and more may be added by children.
- Drinking soda directly leads to extra calories and
increased weight.
- More meals are being eaten outside home, especially fast
food meals, which are very high in calories.
- Lack of early recognition by parents, teachers, healthcare
providers
- The earlier obesity is recognized, the more likely it can
be reversed.
- Ignoring the problem will make it worse.
What can I do to help my child?
You can't control everything your child eats or does, but you can
influence health by promoting exercise and a healthier diet. Here
are some basic tips to start off with:
- Eliminate sweetened beverages, even juice. They are high in
sugar and calories and low on nutrition. It is too easy to
drink lots of these to quench thirst, and get an extra 500 or
more useless calories per day. This is the single most
important change to make.
- Avoid soda, Gatorade sports drinks, sweetened iced tea. Your
child should only drink water, seltzer water, skim milk, and
occasional diet drinks. If it has high fructose corn syrup or
fructose as an ingredient, put it back. This change alone
often leads to weight loss.
- Make desserts and candy a treat for special occasions, not a
daily ritual. Do not use ice cream, cookies, cake, or candy as
a reward for good behavior.
- Limit high calorie dairy foods such as whole milk, cheese, and
sour cream.
- Limit carbohydrates like cereal, bread, crackers. A few
servings a day are OK, but filling up on these will definitely
add extra calories.
- Limit portion sizes to one age appropriate plate. No
overloading the plate. For snacks, do not give the whole bag
or box, just one small serving. Use good judgment about second
helpings. They should also be small in size and include a
variety of healthy foods.
- Limit your child's TV and computer time to an absolute maximum
of 2 hours total per day. Remove the TV from your child's
bedroom. Children who spend more than 2 hours per day in front
of TV are more likely to become overweight.
- Help your child to increase daily activities. Enroll in
community programs or recreation center if available. Really
encourage your child to start going for walks, riding bikes,
playing with friends outside, playing sports, or swimming.
Burn more calories.
If your child's healthcare provider indicates that weight is a
concern, your child may have blood tests for pre-diabetes (fasting
insulin, fasting glucose), risk for heart disease (cholesterol and
blood lipids), and obesity-related liver disease.
What should my child eat?
Emphasize non-processed, whole foods such as lean meat, fish,
vegetables, fruits, nuts, whole grains like rice, quinoa, and
oats.
Some quick meal ideas:
- Breakfast. Eggs, lowfat yogurt, whole fruit (not juice),
oatmeal. Most breakfast cereals are loaded with sugar and
should be avoided.
- Lunch. Turkey, tuna, chicken or other lean meat sandwiches,
tacos with no sour cream or cheese, salad, fruits, vegetables.
- Dinner. Lean meat (chicken, fish, turkey, pork, beef) with
vegetables, salads with lowfat dressings, smaller servings of
rice, pasta, noodles.
- Snacks. Fruits, vegetables, nuts (if over 4 years old),
peanut, cashew, or almond butter on fruit or lowfat crackers,
lowfat yogurt. (Make sure your child does not have a nut
allergy before giving for snacks.) Avoid chips, fried snacks
as much as possible. Avoid snacks in front of the TV.
- Beverages. Water, Seltzer water, unsweetened or diet iced tea,
Crystal Light, occasional diet soda, skim milk.
Make one or two changes at a time and let children adjust. Making
big changes in diet or lifestyle is not easy. Sometimes just
eliminating sweetened drinks and starting an exercise program will
be enough to help your child lose weight.
These are positive changes to help your child to live a healthier
life. You may meet with resistance from your child when you take
away some of the foods they like. Let them know that you are doing
this because you want them to live a long and healthy life.
When should I call my healthcare provider?
You may want to talk with your healthcare provider about meeting
with a nutritionist or dietician. These specialists can give you
more specific meal planning ideas and diet advice.
Your healthcare provider may also refer you a specialty weight
loss clinic if one is available at your hospital.
Developed by Thomas Flass MS, MD, Resident Physician, and Robert Brayden, MD, Professor, University of Colorado School of Medicine.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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