Obese parents, kids lose more weight when treated together

Obese parents, kids lose more weight when treated together

Our parents serve as a model for much of our behavior when we’re young. It stands to reason then that children treated for weight issues alongside a parent fare much better than those treated alone.

New research, published in the late July edition of Pediatrics, revealed that when overweight and obese preschool children were treated with behavioral intervention in a primary care setting with their parents, results were better. Both parents and children experienced greater decrease in body mass index (BMI) compared to children treated by themselves, and both were able to sustain the weight loss after a 12-month follow-up.

Nearly 100 study participants, between ages 2 and 5 with high BMIs and an overweight parent, received diet and activity education over a 12-month period.

A key piece of weight-loss success, researchers found, was practice enhancers. Participants received help from assistants trained in nutrition, exercise science and psychology. These assistants worked with families during treatment, education sessions and phone conversations afterward.

Parents delivered intervention for their children by instructing them on the proper food servings and appropriate calorie values. Kids were taught to avoid “high-energy” foods, such as those high in sugar, those that included more than 5 grams of fat per serving or artificial sweeteners.

Weight loss goals for children were .5 to 1 pound per week. For parents, it was at least 1 pound weekly.

Researchers found that children treated along with a parent gained weight normally in proportion to their height. Over 24 months, children treated alone gained nearly 16 pounds while children treated with a parent gained an average of 12 pounds.

Parents treated along with their children lost an average of 14 pounds while parents of children treated alone experienced no weight changes.

“Instead of the more traditional approach of referring these patients to a specialty clinic, the patient-centered medical home in the pediatrician’s office may be an ideal setting for implementing these family-based treatments,” said lead study author Dr. Teresa Quattrin in a statement. Quattrin is a pediatrician and chair of pediatrics at the University at Buffalo in New York.

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Comments

4 Comments

  1. Lynn Hutley

    There is a family program through our local YWCA that promotes exercise and healthy eating tips. It’s great to have the families working on their health together.

  2. This is great! I know whenever my someone in my family goes on a health kick we all try to do it together. The competition is great motivation, and it’s just a lot easier to be healthy when you surround yourself with other healthy people.

  3. This is a good study. Parents should set good examples for their children, so that the whole family can be healthy together!

  4. My family is like Rebecca’s, we like to be healthy together and sometimes turn it into a contest like who can go the longest without sugar!

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health enews Staff
health enews Staff

health enews staff is a group of experienced writers from our Advocate Health Care and Aurora Health Care sites, which also includes freelance or intern writers.