|
Parents
Urged to Fight Kids' Obesity
Parents are being urged to become
more involved in combatting obesity among children.
Susan Hedrick and her 18-year-old
daughter are turning the tide on years of fast food and sedentary
living. In a bid to shed a combined 180 pounds, they have been
eating healthier and taking long walks this summer.
And they are doing it together
something health and diet experts believe is a key to combating
the nation's growing obesity epidemic, particularly among kids.
Research suggests healthy-eating,
active parents often pass their habits onto their kids, just as
sedentary parents do, said Edward Laskowski, co-director of the
Sports Medicine Center at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.
Laskowski suggests overweight parents
serious about making themselves and their kids healthier start
by holding a family meeting.
"You've got to say, `Hey kids,
you know we've been doing the wrong thing here. Mom and Dad are
wrong too, and we've got to lose some weight. We don't want you
to make the mistakes we've made,'" he said.
Family bike rides, walks, hikes
or doubles tennis are ways to get the whole family burning calories.
And making sure everyone sits down together for a healthy dinnertime
meal is another important step, he said.
Since the early 1970s, the percentage
of American children and adolescents defined as overweight has
more than doubled, to about 15 percent, according to the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
Three out of four overweight teenagers
remain overweight into adulthood. And with two-thirds of American
adults now overweight, they face an increased risk of diabetes,
heart disease and other illnesses.
Barbara Dennison, an associate
professor of clinical pediatrics at Columbia University, said
so many children are now overweight or obese that it has changed
parents' frame of reference. She said parents particularly
those who are obese often do not realize their child is
overweight.
Two years ago, in interviews with
1,180 parents of overweight children, Dennison found that only
about 25 percent of those parents realized their child had a weight
problem.
Her research also found that parents
of overweight children treat mealtime differently than parents
of healthy children, often allowing the child to choose the meal
typically something less nutritious. Some parents even
used sweets to encourage their child to finish a meal.
With America's youth getting fat
on calorie-packed fast foods and snacks and spending too much
time in front of the TV or the computer, Dennison said parents
need to practice what they preach.
"Parents are children's best and
first role models. You can't have Mom watching TV for hours and
saying, `No, Johnny, you can't watch TV, it's bad for you,'" she
said.
Betsy A. Keller, an associate professor
of exercise and sport sciences at Ithaca College in New York,
recently surveyed 130 parents about their children's weight and
lifestyle.
She found that half of the parents
of overweight children underestimated their child's weight status,
deeming them at a normal weight. Keller said her study also found
that parents underestimate how much exercise their children get.
"I don't think we're going to get
at this issue of obesity until we ask the hard questions: What
are you feeding your kid? What are you putting on the table? Why
are you not doing some kind of physical activity with your kids?"
she said.
Hedrick, a 39-year-old pediatric
nurse who has struggled with her weight since childhood, is trying
to do just that because she is determined to make sure Niki does
not carry her extra weight into adulthood.
A recent high school graduate,
Niki had been thin, like her two brothers, until unhealthy habits
she adopted early in high school led to a 50-pound weight gain.
After Hedrick enrolled earlier
this year in a diet and exercise program sponsored by the Indianapolis
hospital where she works, she showed Niki some information about
the program.
At first, the teen was not very
interested, but in the past month or so she has been eating healthier,
drinking fewer sugary sodas, doing sit-ups and taking long walks
either with her mother or alone.
Niki has shed about 5 pounds from
her 5-foot-6 frame and is down to about 170 pounds. She is aiming
to lose 40 pounds more. "It's just for my own personal self,"
she said.
Hedrick, who hopes to lose about
130 pounds, believes she and her daughter can use the buddy system
to make sure both of them stick to their diet and exercise plans.
"I really don't see it as dieting,"
Hedrick said. "I see it as a life-changing journey to make myself
and Niki healthier."
Reference
Source 102
July 6, 2004
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|