¶ … Child Overweight or Obese?
A study performed by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in 1977 reported that approximately seven percent of children in the United States were overweight. A similar study done in 2000 reports that twelve to fourteen percent of children aged six to nineteen are considered overweight. While this number may seem insignificant, what it really means is that one out of every eight children in the United States are obese while another one in five are overweight. This same study goes on to say that overall about fifty percent of Americans are overweight/obese, equating to approximately ninety seven million people in the entire country. This number is increasing every year at an alarming rate. The health risks which are associated with obesity and being overweight is a significant cause for concern because in the United States alone, the number of deaths attributed to obesity is approximately 280,000 every year.
It is known that girls are at a higher risk to be obese than boys. We also know that that minorities, or African-American and Hispanics, are at greater risk for obesity in childhood than their white counterparts. What does it mean to be obese? The general definition is a condition of excess body weight. Clinically in the medical field it is defined as a Body Mass Index (BMI) exceeding 25. It also may be defined as a person or child who exceeds 10% over standard weight tables for age, height, sex and race. For the most part, children who are forty to fifty pounds greater than their ideal body weight are considered to be obese. Children are considered to be overweight when they are approximately twenty-five pounds over their ideal body weight range.
What kind of risks go along with being overweight when one is a child? Many people tend to just consider the problems of obesity as they relate to appearance. The effects that also must be considered include heart disease, stroke, diabetes, kidney disease, cancer and other long-term morbidity associated with obesity. The first thing to point out is that as one ages, the likelihood that obesity will persist into adulthood increases quite dramatically. The highest risk is in adolescence. It is also important to point out that if you have a 1- to 3-year-old overweight child, the likelihood that...
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