Archive for December, 2007

How Is Childhood Obesity Like Climate Change?

Thursday, December 6th, 2007

Both childhood obesity and climate change are early warning signs.

Childhood obesity warns of heart disease: in teens.

You know that schools have been invaded by fast food franchises, seduced by the sweetness of an easy dollar.

What’s new is that this seduction has a price—and the price is the appearance of adult illnesses in kids.

Any clinician who sees obese teens knows that for 10+ years now, they have been coming in with buffalo humps, extra hair on the face, forearms, lower legs and stomach, and acne—early signs of PCOS in girls.

And coming in with hard to cure infections, eyesight gone fuzzy, no energy at all. Until their blood sugar from type 2 diabetes is corrected, and they start to eat less processed, more nutritious food.

And coming in with heart disease.

Yes, teens.

The risk increases at age 7, and increases dramatically by age 13.
How much risk?
How much should your teen weigh?

To quote from new research on heart disease in obese kids.

“A 13-year-old boy who weighs 11.2 kg (24.6 pounds) more than average — which results in a 33% increase in the probability of his having a CHD (cardiac) event before the age of 60.”

The same is true for girls.

Now kids are thought of as at risk only if their BMI are above the 85th percentile on growth charts.

But the new research says risk occurs at a much lower weight.

Smart companies can help employees solve their own problems, if they’re lucky.

But kids? Kids’ self-determination is often up to their schools and their parents. What to do?

USDA runs the school lunch program: that’s 30 million students every day, and 30 million chances to make a difference in kids’ lives that will last a lifetime.

The good news is that overweight kids can get their childhood back–they already too often avoid the activities other kids engage in, and are ashamed.

And if they do, now, while still kids, they will not lose their health to heart disease as young adults.

Subscribe via RSS

The Shape of Pediatric Obesity: Kids Think They're Immortal, But Parents Know Better

Thursday, December 6th, 2007

Does the clock start ticking at age 10?
Heart attack may become a pediatric illness!
In other words, obesity in adolescents means they are at greater risk for heart disease in adults.
This isn’t speculation–it’s from a world-class study of over 270,000 Danish kids, age 7 to 13, studied at age 25, published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Diets don’t usually solve the problem.
Most weight loss programs recommend diets, but most people–kids and adults–fail on diets.
News flash: it’s not kids’ fault. They need school programs or family programs instead.
How to start?
Let’s stop letting schools become fast food franchises.
Let’s ban high-calorie snacks, sugary juices and pop and energy drinks from school stores, cafeterias and vending machines
Let’s get better programs for schools, that don’t involve fast food subsidies of report cards, as they do in some parts of Florida!
Let’s get a Farm Bill that gives subsidies to producers of nutritious produce, not King Corn—which is high calorie, and low nutrient.
Let’s get schools that kick out the purveyors of childhood obesity…which clearly leads to diabetes, heart disease, fatty liver and colorectal cancer, and 7 other cancers …all formerly diseases of adults.
Soon to be the shape of your kids, unless you act now.

Subscribe via RSS