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Safe Neighborhoods Keep Kids Leaner
The safety of a neighborhood
appears to impact childhood obesity.
University of Michigan researchers using a national study found
that kids who live in neighborhoods considered unsafe by their
parents were more likely to be overweight than kids who live
in what their parents considered to be safe neighborhoods.
This is probably because parents in unsafe areas are keeping
their children inside, the researchers said. While that may decrease
the chance of a child encountering a stray bullet or witnessing
a drug deal, it increases sedentary behavior, which contributes
to weight gain.
"We believe it may be because parents who perceive their neighborhoods
as unsafe do not allow their children to play outside as much,
and when children do not play outside as much, they do not get
as much exercise," said study author Dr. Julie Lumeng, an assistant
professor of pediatrics in the division of child behavioral health
at C.S. Mott Children's Hospital at the University of Michigan
in Ann Arbor.
The study, which appears in the January issue of the Archives
of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine , essentially confirms
previous research in the area.
"We already know this, certainly, and we also know that poverty
and obesity are very clearly linked," said Cathy Nonas, director
of the diabetes and obesity programs at North General Hospital
in New York City and a spokeswoman for the American Dietetic
Association. "These researchers are just looking at the issue
again, and clarifying it and making it scientific."
The study also suggests the solutions to the burgeoning problem
of childhood obesity go well beyond individual behaviors to include
the daunting tasks of re-planning entire neighborhoods.
"At the moment, when we do an intervention we do a small intervention
and when we're done, we pull out and it can't be sustained," Nonas
said. "We have to look at this as a public health issue and people
haven't been doing that."
Almost 16 percent of U.S. children aged 6 to 11 are overweight
or obese. Certain segments of this age group are more likely
to be heavy, including black and Hispanic children, children
who watch a lot of television and children whose parents are
heavy.
"Childhood obesity is a huge systemic problem. It's a pandemic
to a certain extent," Nonas said.
More recent research has started to link conditions in communities
to overweight and obesity.
For the latest findings, the researchers amassed data on 768
children and families who were participating in a National Institute
of Child Health and Human Development study on early child care
and youth development. The families were located in 10 diverse
regions of the United States.
Parents completed questionnaires indicating how safe they thought
their neighborhoods were when their child was in first grade.
The kids' height and weight were measured at 4.5 years and during
first grade, when their average age was 7, which is when the
prevalence of childhood overweight increases most rapidly.
In this sample, 17 percent of children living in the neighborhoods
considered least safe by their parents were overweight, compared
with 10 percent in the next safest category, 13 percent in the
next and only 4 percent of those living in the safest sections.
The researchers noted in a prepared statement, "This relationship
was not affected by any other variables . . . measured, including
the education levels or marital status of the children's mothers,
racial or ethnic backgrounds or participation in after-school
activities."
The findings point up the very real possibility that neighborhood
planning policies may be directly relevant to child health.
And, the researchers suggested, pediatricians should take note
of the findings.
"Many areas of policy development related to the built environment
and neighborhood safety have not traditionally been considered
relevant to child health," they wrote. "However, such policies
may have important implications for childhood overweight. For
the individual physician, these results suggest the need to understand
the character of a child's neighborhood when making recommendations
for lifestyle and activity changes aimed at obesity prevention
and treatment."
"If it were as easy as telling parents to have their children
eat healthier and exercise more, I don't believe as many children
would be overweight," added Lumeng. "We need to think together
about the multitude of factors that increase a child's risk of
overweight, and then target them one by one... The complexity
of all of these issues speaks to the complexity of addressing
the obesity epidemic."
The Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation has done research on obesity in
children, including how unsafe parks may contribute to the
problem.
SOURCES: Julie Lumeng, M.D., assistant professor, pediatrics,
division of child behavioral health, C.S. Mott Children's Hospital,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Cathy Nonas, M.S., R.D., director,
diabetes and obesity programs, North General Hospital, New York
City, spokeswoman, American Dietetic Association and author, Outwit
Your Weight ; January 2006 Archives of Pediatrics and
Adolescent Medicine
Reference
Source 62
January
2,
2006
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