Think those chubby cheeks are sooo cute? Stop pinching and pull out the scale.
A new study says one in five American four-year-olds is obese. Not chunky. Not husky. Obese.
Sponsored by the National Center for Education Statistics, the study shows a drastically higher problem in minority groups, with thirty-one percent of American Indian children who were obese, twenty-two percent of Hispanics and twenty-one percent of blacks.
By comparison, sixteen percent of white kids were dangerously overweight, and thirteen percent of Asian children were obese. Based on an analysis of nationally representative height and weight
data on more than eight thousand preschoolers born in 2001, the study
took into account where a child falls on the percentile chart. Those
who fell in the ninety-fifth percentile or higher qualified as obese.
Unfortunately, the statistics are not that surprising when you break down the higher numbers of low income families in minority groups - especially living on reservations. Low income families have a pre-disposition toward obesity because of the quality of food they can afford, food that is often carbohydrate rich but lacking in nutritional value. A recent study showed parents in low-income families were also more likely to pass on a habit of over-eating to their children because they look to food as a form of comfort.
It's hard for parents of any income level to distinguish whether or not their kids are overweight, but it's scarier still for parents to face a child as young as four with a weight problem. They're supposed to still have boundless energy at this age, to burn off their food just running like a banshee through the house! And how to tell when a kid is still working off the baby fat?
Just another reason to march them in for the well visit and load them up on the scale.
Image: One Step Ahead
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