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Dieting
Makes Little Girls Fatter
Girls who are starting to get too fat
at 5 are often experienced dieters by the age of 9 -- but put
on extra fat instead of taking it off, U.S. researchers said.
They said their study shows that
children and their parents are well aware when they weigh too
much, but they do not know the best ways to slim down.
Jennifer Shunk and Leann Birch
of Pennsylvania State University studied 153 girls living in central
Pennsylvania. Those who weighed too much tried to diet, but ended
up putting on more weight, they wrote in their report, published
in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association.
The unhappier the girls were with
their weight, the more they tried to diet, but they failed. This
supports other research that shows "youths' attempts at weight
control may promote weight gain," Shunk and Birch wrote.
At age 5, 32 of the girls were
considered at risk of being overweight by Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
They were checked again at ages
7 and 9. At 7, girls at risk for overweight were eating significantly
more than those not at risk, the researchers wrote.
For the study they were asked about
foods they ate and answered questions such as, "Do you try to
only eat a little bit on purpose so that you won't get fat?"
The girls were left in a room with
toys and snacks and told to play or eat while the researchers
left the room. The researchers watched to see what the children
ate.
The heavier girls tended to munch
snacks even if they were not hungry.
The researchers said their study
supports other research that shows when people try to diet by
simply eating too little, they eventually set themselves up for
binges.
Mothers may also help this along
by forbidding the girls to eat snacks, they said.
"Even during the preschool period,
before any evidence for the emergence of dietary restraint, maternal
feeding practices that restrict children's access to palatable
foods can promote children's overeating," they wrote.
Middle-class families, especially,
try to restrict snacks because they do not want overweight children,
they added.
"However, rather than promoting
moderation, these feeding practices can promote disregulated overeating
in children."
Instead, parents should themselves
demonstrate healthy patterns of eating and exercise, the researchers
advised.
Reference
Source 89
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