Child Obesity

joy_ryan's picture

I have found that many children are increasingly becoming over weight. This was beginning to bother me because children have more energy than adults, shouldn't they be running around? So, I did some research to find out why this is happening:

1. Insufficient Calorie Expenditure Through Exercise
The average American child spends a significant percentage of leisure time watching TV, or playing computer games. Few calories are expended during this sedentary activity. Not surprisingly, obesity rates are higher among children and teenagers who frequently watch television. In addition,

only a small minority of children (1 in 5) regularly participate in after-school sports or extra-curricular physical activity.

2. Excessive Snacking
Excess nibbling is a probable cause of obesity in children. Americans are estimated to spend over $1 billion dollars a day on snacks. The average American eats the equivalent of a fourth meal every day. And children are no exception. Often surrounded at school by high-calorie snack vending machines dispensing (eg) sugary soft drinks, regular TV-watching exposes the child to a battery of high-energy snack foods and drinks.

3. Fast Food Diet
Over-consumption of fast food is another probable cause of child/teen obesity. In 1992, children aged 6-14 years ate in quick-serve restaurants on average 157 million times a month. Children are courted and targeted by many fast food chains, who promote super-size portions and all-you-can-eat offers.

4. Family Behaviors
It's difficult to separate genetic from family-environmental factors as causes of childhood obesity. Although children of obese parents are estimated to have a 25-30 percent extra chance of becoming obese themselves, part of this increased risk of obesity is probably due to eating habits and poor family nutrition, rather than heredity. Parental behavioral patterns concerning shopping, cooking, eating and exercise, have an important influence on a child's energy balance.

5. Body Image
Obesity in a child or adolescent may also be encouraged by a distorted body image, due to peer pressure, parental influence - including attitude of parents to weight loss and dieting.

Genetic Causes of Child Obesity
Genes affect a huge number of weight-related chemical processes in the body. Metabolic rate, blood glucose metabolism, fat-storage, hormones to name but a few, are all influenced by our genetic inheritance. Also, some studies of adopted children indicate that adopted children tend to develop weight problems similar to their biological, rather than adoptive, parents. In addition, infants born to overweight moms have been found to be less active and to gain more weight by the age of three months when compared with infants of normal weight mothers. This indicates a possible inborn drive to conserve energy (Roberts, Savage, Coward, Chew, & Lucas, 1988).

Genes Cannot Account For Surge in Child Obesity
Although genes do have an effect on weight-related chemical processes in children, they cannot account for the sudden upsurge in childhood obesity, or the rise in teenage obesity. Approximately one in five children in the US between the ages of 6 and 17 is overweight. This is twice the rate it was, 30 years ago. By contrast, changes in genes and DNA only occur over thousands of centuries.

--(Anne Collins)

I was shocked after reading that information and began to wonder, what happened to having fun playing games outside with friends? Did T.V and nitendo take over the entertainment of actual human interaction and activities?

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Shimmeringstar's picture
Member of the Progressive U Alumni Association

I think the biggest influence on child obesity are parents. After all, children don't learn how and what to eat by themselves. When a child is young, they eat what their parents give them. You don't see too many three-year-olds fixing their own lunch or snack. Parents need to wake up and see that it's them putting nasty sugary toxins into the bodies of their little ones.

If kids learn how to eat right at a young age, chances are they'll continue to do so into adulthood.

It makes sense that as the rate of adult obesity increases, so does the rate of child obesity. Children eat what their parents do.