Monday, December 5, 2011

Very Interesting Article!

Kids with Working Mothers More Apt to be Overweight




Childhood obesity is driven by many factors and now researchers have added a new one to the list: whether mom has a job. Children who have working mothers are more likely to be overweight, new research shows.
A recent study from University College London analyzed the weights of more than 8,500 seven-year-olds in 1965 then repeated the study with 1,889 of their four to nine-year-old children in 1991. According to their findings, 12 percent of boys and eight percent of girls had weight problems in the first analysis; however, the figures doubled for the children 30 years later.
In the Sixties, children with working mothers also were 28 percent more likely to be overweight than children who had mothers that stayed at home, the study showed. In the 1990s, children with working mothers had a 48 percent jump in their risk of obesity.

Mothers who hold full time jobs have less time to prepare nutritious meals, speculate researchers, and the children also spend more time home alone, where they snack on unhealthy foods and watch television instead of playing outside. The American Journal of Epidemiology reported that the inception of fast food culture over the past 45 years has led children to pack on excess pounds.
Researcher Dr. Leah Li said the trend of kids getting increasingly fatter will keep getting worse if nothing changes, noting, “The high prevalence of child obesity is likely to result in further increases in adult obesity and associated health consequences.”
Whether maternal employment is the only cause of higher childhood BMI for the second study cohort is not clear, and many other unmeasured factors could be having an effect too. Still, Dr. Li notes that implementing public policies geared toward supporting working moms and less advantaged families can help to reverse the obesity trend.

Friday, November 11, 2011

Interesting Article....


Obesity Can Be Predicted in Infants, Study Shows




The risk of obesity can be recognized from infancy, according to new research findings, which point to two key milestones on doctors’ growth charts. Photo courtesy CDC/Mary Anne Fenley, photo by James GathanyBabies that passed two key milestones on growth charts by age two have twice the risk of childhood obesity compared to infants that grow at a slower rate, a new study shows. Those that grow at a very fast rate during the first six months are also more likely to be obese at age 10, researchers say.
Pediatricians use growth charts organized into percentiles to plot babies’ weight and height in relation to other children that are the same age and gender. For example, an infant in the 80th percentile for weight would weigh more than 80 percent of his peers.

Researchers examined height and weight information for 45,000 infants and children younger than age 11 who had routine growth measurements during doctor checkups. Infants whose weight crossed at least two of seven percentile cut-off points on the charts within the first two years were at a greater risk of obesity than those who grew more slowly, the data showed. The risk of obesity at ages five and ten was highest among those infants who jumped at least two percentile groups on the growth charts by age six months.
Based on the findings, doctors and parents should take rapid growth as a warning sign, said pediatrician Dr. Elsie Taveras, the study’s lead author and an obesity researcher at Harvard Medical School. She noted that babies that pack on weight too rapidly may not be spending enough time crawling around or may be overfed.
Other experts argue that babies grow in spurts and warn that putting an infant on a diet could actually prompt obesity later.
In an editorial published alongside the new study, released online on Monday in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Dr. Michelle Lampl, director of Emory University’s Center for the Study of Human Health, and Edward Frongillo, an infant growth specialist at the University of South Carolina, voiced their concerns over the conclusions of the researchers. Only 12 percent of the infants that crossed at least two key points on growth charts were obese at age 5, they noted, a figure close to the national average. In the U.S., about 10 percent of preschool-aged children are obese, versus about 19 percent of those aged 6 to 11.
Dr. Taveras emphasized the need to address from an early age the likelihood of childhood obesity, and the increased risk of health issues, such as Type 2 diabetes, that obese children face.
“If we could screen children earlier, then we could prevent seeing a 5-year-old that’s obese,” Dr. Taveras told MyHealthNewsDaily. Breastfeeding babies longer, avoiding sugary beverages, like juices, and giving them more opportunity to crawl, climb and walk can help reduce their risk of developing childhood obesity as they develop, she said.