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OBESITY: 4-Year-Olds In Ohio State-Temple University Study Are Wildly Overweight

LINDSEY TANNER   04/ 6/09 10:03 PM ET   AP

Obesity

CHICAGO — A striking new study says almost 1 in 5 American 4-year-olds is obese, and the rate is alarmingly higher among American Indian children, with nearly a third of them obese. Researchers were surprised to see differences by race at so early an age.

Overall, more than half a million 4-year-olds are obese, the study suggests. Obesity is more common in Hispanic and black youngsters, too, but the disparity is most startling in American Indians, whose rate is almost double that of whites.

The lead author said that rate is worrisome among children so young, even in a population at higher risk for obesity because of other health problems and economic disadvantages.

"The magnitude of these differences was larger than we expected, and it is surprising to see differences by racial groups present so early in childhood," said Sarah Anderson, an Ohio State University public health researcher. She conducted the research with Temple University's Dr. Robert Whitaker.

Dr. Glenn Flores, a pediatrics and public health professor at University of Texas Southwestern Medical School in Dallas, said the research is an important contribution to studies documenting racial and ethnic disparities in children's weight.

"The cumulative evidence is alarming because within just a few decades, America will become a 'minority majority' nation," he said. Without interventions, the next generation "will be at very high risk" for heart disease, high blood pressure, cancers, joint diseases and other problems connected with obesity, said Flores, who was not involved in the new research.

The study is an analysis of nationally representative height and weight data on 8,550 preschoolers born in 2001. Children were measured in their homes and were part of a study conducted by the government's National Center for Education Statistics. The results appear in Monday's Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine.

Almost 13 percent of Asian children were obese, along with 16 percent of whites, almost 21 percent of blacks, 22 percent of Hispanics, and 31 percent of American Indians.

Children were considered obese if their body-mass index, a height-weight ratio, was in the 95th percentile or higher based on government BMI growth charts. For 4-year-olds, that would be a BMI of about 18.

For example, a girl who is 4 1/2 years old, 40 inches tall and 42 pounds would have a BMI of about 18, weighing 4 pounds more than the government's upper limit for that age, height and gender.

Some previous studies of young children did not distinguish between kids who were merely overweight versus obese, or they examined fewer racial groups.

The current study looked only at obesity and a specific age group. Anderson called it the first analysis of national obesity rates in preschool kids in the five ethnic or racial groups.

The researchers did not examine reasons for the disparities, but others offered several theories.

Flores cited higher rates of diabetes in American Indians, and also Hispanics, which scientists believe may be due to genetic differences.

Also, other factors that can increase obesity risks tend to be more common among minorities, including poverty, less educated parents, and diets high in fat and calories, Flores said.

Jessica Burger, a member of the Little River Ottawa tribe and health director of a tribal clinic in Manistee, Mich., said many children at her clinic are overweight or obese, including preschoolers.

Burger, a nurse, said one culprit is gestational diabetes, which occurs during a mother's pregnancy. That increases children's chances of becoming overweight and is almost twice as common in American Indian women, compared with whites.

She also blamed the federal commodity program for low-income people that many American Indian families receive. The offerings include lots of pastas, rice and other high-carbohydrate foods that contribute to what Burger said is often called a "commod bod."

"When that's the predominant dietary base in a household without access to fresh fruits and vegetables, that really creates a better chance of a person becoming obese," she said.

Also, Burger noted that exercise is not a priority in many American Indian families struggling to make ends meet, with parents feeling stressed just to provide basic necessities.

To address the problem, her clinic has created activities for young Indian children, including summer camps and a winter break "outdoor day" that had kids braving 8-degree temperatures to play games including "snowsnake." That's a traditional American Indian contest in which players throw long, carved wooden "snakes" along a snow or ice trail to see whose lands the farthest.

The hope is that giving kids used to modern sedentary ways a taste of a more active traditional American Indian lifestyle will help them adopt healthier habits, she said.

___

On the Net:

Archives: http://www.archpediatrics.com

Association of American Indian Physicians: http://tinyurl.com/c8raox

(This version CORRECTS the group's name to National Center for Education Statistics, not Educational Statistics.)

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CHICAGO — A striking new study says almost 1 in 5 American 4-year-olds is obese, and the rate is alarmingly higher among American Indian children, with nearly a third of them obese. Researchers ...
CHICAGO — A striking new study says almost 1 in 5 American 4-year-olds is obese, and the rate is alarmingly higher among American Indian children, with nearly a third of them obese. Researchers ...
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11:40 PM on 04/28/2009
If you have a child who is over weight
just say out loud now Jesus I believe and
I receive you in my heart please heal my
child if you want more help I know a really
good website to go to it is leroyjenkins.com
01:07 AM on 04/12/2009
What these parents need to do Is get out a belt and say "yu do as i say" and eat those vegetables or else your gonna get the beaten of your life.lol
07:29 PM on 04/11/2009
IIn the case of children, unless they have a thyroid problem or some other medical issue that has not been addressed, I place total blame on the parents. Parents in a lot of cases are the enablers. They buy the junk food, the sweets, the sodas and all the food that's loaded with carbs and fill their kitchens and pantrys with them. Like the one poster wrote buying healthy foods may be a bit pricier but when you look at the potential health problems down the road, that is much more costly than eating healthy. That's number one. My parents made sure my siblings and I ate fruit and vegetables or guess what, you weren't given a substitute. They also encouraged us to get involved with out door physical activity by participating in it with us. A lot of parents have a philosophy that if I allow my child to veg out in front of the TV or computer and eat whatever they want, they are doing it because they love them and want them to be happy. I believe that's child ABUSE and should be treated as a crime.

Lastly, the other day Oprah had a show about this very thing. The one young man weighed almost 900lbs. The doctor's predicted that in a short period of time, his heart would give out and he would die. The mother admitted to being the enabler.
01:42 PM on 04/11/2009
No its not poverty, No its not the food banks, no its not the childrens fault, no its not McDonalds, Burger King, etc. no its not because healthy food costs more than junk food,(two apples costs less then a bag of chips, juice costs close to the same as soda) no its not that we dont have enough programs to teach parents to teach their kids how to eat right, Yes its just good ole fashioned common sense, MAKE your children eat less and exercise more, plain and simple.
08:36 AM on 04/11/2009
I was raised in a small midwestern town and I guess I don't understand this whole obesity thing. You all seem to be pointing fingers at ethnic groups and blaming it on other entities; don't we each as indivisuals own the problem of obesity. I grew up on meat, potatoes and vegtables, fried at that, we never had a problem with obesity. Large amounts of chips, soda and fast food were not part of our diet, but home made cookies and cakes were. As I age I find that I can't consume as much of those types of food as I used to. Portion size has been the key to my weight success, and just because it is meal time doesn't mean theat you have to engage in a full blown spread. If I'm hungry I eat; if not I don't and when I am full I quit.. I am no health nut, I just pay attention to what and how much I eat. I am 50 now and am the same size as age 20. Weight is a way of life.
11:08 AM on 04/10/2009
Is it any surprise? When the foods kids tend to eat are NOT nutrient rich whole foods, but calorie dense, additive ridden and devoid of the micronutrients that keep our bodies' systems working?

Kids today eat cereal, sugared yogurt, granola bars with high fructose corn syrup, wheat (but not whole grain) bread and crackers galore. And that's if they eat what advertisers call a "healthy" diet.

Kids' bodies store up all those calories, don't know what to do with all those additives, and are crying out for the nutrients they need to keep them healthy. OUR HIGHLY PROCESSED FOOD DIET IS MAKING THEM SICK.
Unadulturated whole foods - Whole grains, VEGGIES and fruit, whole fat dairy, animal protein NOT loaded with hormones and antibiotics.

You think kids won't eat healthy food? On the contrary, we've demonstrated where we work with youth in inner cities, when they get their hands on healthy food, learn to make it taste good, and enjoy it among their friends and community, they LOVE to eat it.

You think healthy food is too expensive? Try adding up what you may spend later on health care to treat diet related illnesses and see if it's worth it in the short term to spend extra for healthier foods.

You don't have time to cook? Call us. We'll give you ideas for making healthy food an affordable and convenient part of your life.

We can get your kids (heck, even YOU) to eat your veggies.

www.rootdownla.org
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
10:28 AM on 04/09/2009
Is it a safe bet that a large percentage - if not the majority - of overweight children live in the South?
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Fred Hahn
Author, trainer.
05:49 PM on 04/08/2009
The cause and cure for adolescent obesity continues to be misunderstood. And this is a terrible shame since the answer is so very simple.

Adolescent obesity (as well as adult obesity) is caused by excessive carbohydrate consumption. It is virtually impossible to become obese if carbohydrate is kept to a minimum (and no health is not in any way compromised by eating in this manner).

Exercise has absolutely nothing to do with why our youth today are obese. Nothing whatsoever.

Until we ditch our 'paradigm paralysis' on this subject, our children will continue to suffer and suffer dearly.
03:10 PM on 04/08/2009
When I was growing up, being overweight was hard because they weren't that many. But in those days a bag of chips was only thirty cents, and it was a small bag. Now there is about 6-10 overweight kids in almost every class room. Being overweight is not that uncommon. But look at a regular bag of chips. It is huge. And we are all getting huge. Portion control is so important.
12:52 PM on 04/08/2009
Native Americans are also more likely to have amputations as secondary complications of diabetes, as well. High fructose corn syrup (HFCS) is not food. This is absolute! It is obtained by boiling down corn cobs (not even cows eat that part), and the human body cannot process it. My sister is allergic to corn- and it is in everything: processed food; soda; prescription medications (as corn starch), you name it. When she stopped eating anything processed, and anything with HFCS she lost weight. She was over 200 lbs, 5'2". She was essentially "pre-diabetic." She has lost over 100 lbs, in fact she has to struggle to maintain her weight. Leticia
12:17 PM on 04/08/2009
I'm a Native raising children on the reservation, and it is true there are plenty of barriers here. The only local store in our areas don't stock up on foods that are healthy, It is difficult to find such items, they stock up with what sells, which is high fat foods. Fruits are available, but they are expensive because we live in such remote areas so we are paying for additional fees, but there are still good deals on produce. As for our children, what I see is parents giving their children bags of chips, candy, soda, etc. only to keep them quiet and out of the way. I am a parent and my goal was to start their lives out healthy by breastfeeding them,it is how our ancestors surived. Parents now a days make formula and stick the bottle in, (diabetes and obesity in a bottle) and walk away, and the baby is eating more than they really need because no one is watching them. I've seen parents treat their children as if they are just burdens, and do anything to keep them out of the way. I think Natives need to grow up and get over the historical trauma and do something about it. Living off the government feeling sorry for themselves is not one way to do it, it's only killing our children.
10:34 AM on 04/08/2009
I was behind a Hispanic couple with their two elementary school girls at the grocery store the other day. They appeared to have plenty of money to spend on healthy food but for reasons of their own were spending every penny on junk. There wasn't a fresh vegetable or fruit in their basket, in fact nothing that could be classified as an actual ingredient. Everything was processed or pre-fabricated in some fashion. When I last saw them they were loading up with those loathsome "lunchables" kid food packages. The parents were slightly overweight; the two girls were headed for obesity.

Obviously Hispanic parents are far from the only ones making bad choices. But I find it especially poignant when for less money they could be feeding their children homemade tamales, roast pork carnitas and green chili stew instead of chemical-loaded mac and cheese.
11:54 AM on 04/08/2009
As a Hispanic, I find it deeply disturbing that you judge an entire heterogeneous people based on one family. And, by the way, what the heck to you even know about that family? Maybe there had been a death in the family that week, and this was just there temporary way of coping. Maybe they had a whole refrigerator full of vegetables at home.
02:03 AM on 04/08/2009
Another reason the Native American kids could be obese is because they're eating foods that N.A.'s haven't evolved to digest properly. There've been studies that show that populations who have evolved around certain food sources operate more optimally on those traditional diets--for example, much of traditional Japanese food contains little to no dairy. Lactose intolerance also happens to be more prevalent in people of Japanese descent than in people of, say, Maasai descent (the Maasai are an African tribe which consumes lots of dairy).

It would be interesting if a study was done by re-introducing traditional Native American foods (specific to tribes, of course) and monitoring the health effects on both NA children and adults. I would guess that there would be a decrease in diabetes and obesity.
11:20 PM on 04/07/2009
The question is: Are they really ob,ese?

According to the standardized charts that these people use to determine who is f,at and who isn't, I'm obe,se. I'm 6'1" and weigh about 225 pounds.

I'm also built like a Ma.ck Truck.

It's my frame. I'm not ob,ese by any stretch of the imagination. I couldn't get below 210 if I wanted to--and if I tried, I'd look like a r,ail. Yet these charts say I should be no more than 180. The fact is these charts are either outdated or were never any good in the first place.

I'm not saying overweight kids aren't out there in large numbers, I'm simply saying take this "report" with a grain of salt.
03:37 PM on 04/08/2009
It sounds like much of your 225 pounds is muscle and other lean mass, in which case, no, you are not obese. BMI is only really useful as an indicator--one tool in a full kit of metrics, the most useful of which are actually waist circumference (here's a good, brief explanation http://www.bmi-calculator.net/waist-to-hip-ratio-calculator/waist-circumference.php) and body fat percentage (this is a useful guide http://www.healthchecksystems.com/bodyfat.htm). The problem is that, while body fat % is a very good indicator of obesity, BMI (which is supposed to give an estimation of this number) is wildly inaccurate on anything but a population-level scale.

That said, percentile charts definitely have their uses for children. I work as a coordinator on a pediatric study in an obesity research center, and I can pretty much guarantee you that any child with a BMI percentile of 95 and above will be confirmed as at risk for obesity by additional measures over 99% of the time. To put things in perspective, I have a pretty small frame, at 5'8 and 150 lbs, but I regularly get 7 and 8 year olds in here who weigh more than I do.
11:19 PM on 04/07/2009
The question is: Are they really obese?

According to the standardized charts that these people use to determine who is fat and who isn't, I'm obese. I'm 6'1" and weigh about 225 pounds.

I'm also built like a Mack Truck.

It's my frame. I'm not obese by any stretch of the imagination. I couldn't get below 210 if I wanted to--and if I tried, I'd look like a rail. Yet these charts say I should be no more than 180. The fact is these charts are either outdated or were never any good in the first place.

I'm not saying overweight kids aren't out there in large numbers, I'm simply saying take this "report" with a grain of salt.
09:30 AM on 04/08/2009
I believe these charts are inaccurate also. I fall into the underweight category but have always been small framed. If I were to gain 30 more pounds I do not know where on my body it could possibly be distributed. I don't agree with the fact that lower income families can only afford unhealthy foods. I am a single mom as was my mother and neither one of us has had a problem feeding our children healthy meals. In fact, if you plan what meals to make a week in advanced you can budget yourself and your children will thank you for it later. Most healthy meals take a little more effort to make with peeling and cutting vegetables but we are talking maybe 30 more minutes out of your day. My children also know not to just start rummaging through the food. Too often I see children allowed to grab food at will. I let them know that I have plans for meals with the food in stock but after dinner they are allowed to have dessert. It is harder as they go into middle shool and high school but setting boundaries while they are younger helps them make better choices.