Four Paradigms For Childhood Obesity Term Paper

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¶ … Childhood Obesity According to the Center for Disease Control (CDC) (2010), childhood obesity has more than tripled over the past 30 years. The frequency of obesity among children aged 6 to 11 years rose from 6.5% in 1980 to 19.6% in 2008, while among adolescents aged 12 to 19 years the obesity rate increased from 5.0% to 18.1% during the same period. Obesity results when more calories are consumed than expended, and is influenced by genetic, behavioral and environmental factors. Let us take a look at four paradigms associated with this phenomenon.

The functionalist perspective asserts obese are necessary in order to drive others to become healthy and learn what is making people obese. From this perspective the key is not to eliminate this condition, but to utilize this state to explore the psychological and emotional factors that make this situation possible.

Functionalists are concerned with the stability of society and contend the obesity leads to other things such as economic gains that help society as a whole and would damage society's stability if they were to disappear. The abundance of fast food restaurants, diet books, health spas and advertisers that profit from obesity is a good thing for the functionalist. If they did not exist society would not be balanced.

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The macro perspective involves the way other socieites view the West and want to emulate the richness of capitalism. The other is micro and is the way individuals learn from each other, beginning with parents or care givers. This theory postulates that conduct is learned by observing modeled behaviors and imitation.
Because many adults do not have healthy diets they pass their unhealthy eating habits to their children. Children are not in control of their food supply and must rely on adults to model a diet. Another factor that may contribute to obesity is school lunches. While at school children are a captive audience, if their lunches include pizza, hot dogs, and the like, that is the behavior and taste they will develop. Conversely, if healthy choices are offered, then the child will be inclined to seek those. Food and hunger are primary drives for our needs and these learned behaviors remain basic parts of an individual's attitude toward nutrition.

The Interpretive or Hermeneutic Paradigm takes into account economics, social status, level of power, rationalization and an historical view of obesity. At a certain weight health problems begin and the ability to work and become a contributing member to society is…

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Works Cited

Center for Disease Control. "Childhood Obesity." CDC/Healthy Youth. 3 June 2010. Web. 28 April 2012. <http://www.cdc.gov/HealthyYouth/obesity/index.htm>


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