Childhood Obesity: A Family Thing
I hope you took some time to scan the Executive Summary of American Association of Pediatrics Guidelines for Physicians. If you couldn’t, here are the three things that stood out to me.
Screening by Pediatricians and Primary Care Physicians
The focus of the guidelines was to assess risk factors for degenerative disease such as heart disease and diabetes in children who exceed the 85th percentile of the normal growth charts, indicating overweight, and 95th percentile, indicating obesity. The guidelines recommend beginning at 2 years of age and continuing through 18.
Were there recommendations for the use of medications and bariatric surgery in children over 12 and 14 respectively? Yes, but they were referrals to specialists for evaluations, not a blank invitation to write prescriptions.
It Must Be a Family Thing
Without exception, the guidelines recommend intensive health behavior and lifestyle treatment. “Health behavior and lifestyle treatment is more effective with greater contact hours; the most effective treatment includes 26 or more hours of face-to-face, family-based, multicomponent treatment over a three- to twelve-month period.”
That’s not the same as giving Mom and Dad a diet for the child and sending them on their way. Family-based programs have demonstrated great success, but it has to be a family thing.
It’s All About the Money
The summary also talked about obstacles to the family-based treatment approach. The major obstacle is money:
- Money for training pediatricians and family practice physicians on how to assess childhood obesity.
- Money for training more people to teach and work with families—it’s labor intensive.
- Money for public health and community programs that can support the family-based approach.
It’s a situation we’ve seen many times: Everyone knows how important preventive healthcare and early treatment is, but no one wants to pay for it. But maybe we shouldn’t always look to government to foot the bill; maybe schools, community organizations, and churches could offer programs for their members. If what we’ve always done isn’t working, let’s try something different.
The Bottom Line
The guidelines introduce a couple of new approaches for those with the most severe weight problems, but the focus is on intensive nutrition and behavior-change training for the entire family. That’s not just “Here’s a diet and exercise program, and I’ll see you next year.” The guidelines give a reasonable approach to help the future health of the nation. The approach is simple: Eat less. Eat better. Move more. What they’re saying is that healthcare professionals need training to be able to do that effectively as a team in a reasonable family-based approach. That’s the right approach as I see it.
What are you prepared to do today?
Dr. Chet
Reference: Pediatrics e2022060641.https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2022-060641