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Laurel Edmunds a Department of Public Health, University of
Oxford, Oxford OX3 7LF, UK, b Centre for Community Child Health, Royal Children's
Hospital, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia, c University of Sydney and New Children's Hospital, Sydney,
2145 NSW, Australia Correspondence to:
Laurel Edmunds laurel.edmunds{at}dphpc.ox.ac.uk
The parents of
a 10 year old boy who is very overweight bring him to consult you.
He is an only child. His mother is of normal weight but his father is a
large man and is overweight. His father's two brothers are obese. His
parents report that the boy's behaviour is deteriorating and that he
is becoming isolated from his peers. His mother has tried various
dieting strategies but these have not halted his increasing gain in
weight. His parents are concerned that he will "end up like his two
uncles." The boy says he is unhappy about his size because he gets
teased and has trouble making friends. His mother asks whether his
health is at risk and how he can be helped.
In 1998 the World Health Organization designated obesity as a
global epidemic.1 The epidemic, which includes adults and children, is a result of societal and environmental factors that promote weight gain, factors that health professionals cannot expect to
change. Results of obesity treatment programmes at obesity clinics have
been disappointing, although children do better than adults. Prevention
is therefore essential to reduce the health burden of obesity on
society. It is vital to treat and prevent obesity in childhood, as
lifestyle behaviours that contribute to and sustain obesity in adults
are less well established in children and may be more amenable to
change. The evidence suggests that the family provides a suitable
environment for treatment and prevention of further weight gain, and
schools present a convenient opportunity for population based
prevention strategies, as long as overweight children are not stigmatised.
Evaluating weight status in children is a problem. Body status is
frequently described in terms of the body mass index (body mass index = weight (kg)/height (m)2). The index increases
after birth, decreases around the age of 2 years, and increases again
between the ages of 5 and 8. This second increase is termed the period
of "adiposity rebound," considered early if it occurs at 5-6 years.
Body mass index cut off points are the same as in adults, a value above
25 indicating overweight and above 30 indicating
obesity.
2 3
This is not a perfect measure in children,
because children accumulate fat free mass as they grow, but it does
correlate moderately well to strongly with estimates of "fatness."
Use of population specific centiles of the body mass index, where
available, has been suggested. "Overweight" and "obese" are
usually defined as values above the 85th and 95th percentiles, respectively.
You need the evidence based answers to a number of questions
before you can decide on the best course of action for your patient. You frame your questions to elicit the evidence, specifying in each
case the population; the event or exposure; the intervention; and the
outcome; and identifying the question type (1) In 6-12 year old children (population) what is the prevalence
(event) of overweight or obesity (outcome)? [baseline risk]
(2) In children who are overweight or obese (population,
exposure) what is the risk of psychosocial problems (outcome)?
[baseline risk]
(3) In children who are overweight or obese (population,
exposure) what is the risk of current and future health problems (outcome)? [baseline risk, prognosis]
(4) In children who are overweight or obese (population,
exposure) what is the risk of obesity in adulthood (outcome)?
[prognosis]
(5) In obese pre-adolescent children (population, exposure) are
family based programmes (intervention) effective for weight reduction
(outcome)? [therapy]
(6) In children (population) do school based programmes
(intervention) effectively prevent and treat overweight and obesity without risk of harm (outcome)? [therapy]
You start your search with sources of summarised and appraised
evidence. Clinical Evidence (Issue 5, 2001) has no chapter on childhood
obesity. The Cochrane Library, an electronic source of high
quality reviews of effective interventions
(www.update-software.com/clibhome/clib.htm (password required)),
contains one review and one protocol for a review of childhood obesity,
entitled "Interventions for preventing obesity in
childhood"4 and "Interventions for treating obesity in
childhood."5 Two additional reviews of randomised
controlled trials are located in the database of abstracts of reviews
of effectiveness (DARE),
6 7
and two recent trials of
obesity treatment are listed in the Cochrane controlled trials register (CCTR).
8 9
Additionally, the internet site of the journal Pediatrics provides recommendations for the evaluation and
treatment of overweight children (posted in 1998).10 These
sources of high quality evidence provide the information you need
without the need for a detailed search of Medline.
Prevalence of overweight and obesity
Psychological problems
Current and future health problems
Risk of obesity in adulthood
Family based programmes for weight reduction
![]()
THE CASE
Top
THE CASE
Background
Database queries
Summary of evidence
Applying the evidence
References
Summary points
Young obese children should maintain weight or gain weight slowly
rather than lose weight
Inculcating healthy eating habits is better than restricting diet
Sustainable lifestyle activities should be encouraged
Psychosocial problems are important consequences of overweight or
obesity
Behavioural treatments should be individually designed
All treatments must be acceptable to the family
![]()
Background
Top
THE CASE
Background
Database queries
Summary of evidence
Applying the evidence
References
![]()
Database queries
Top
THE CASE
Background
Database queries
Summary of evidence
Applying the evidence
References
whether it seeks evidence
of a prevalence or risk in a baseline population, a prognosis, the
value of therapy.
![]()
Summary of evidence
Top
THE CASE
Background
Database queries
Summary of evidence
Applying the evidence
References
Evidence from the national health and nutrition examination survey
(NHANES) in the United States and the national study of health and
growth in the United Kingdom shows an increasing prevalence of
overweight and obesity in young children and
adolescents.
11 12
The distribution curve of overweight
has become skewed to the right over time, indicating that children who
are already overweight are getting fatter. In the United States, the
proportion of 6 to 11 year old children who are obese (body mass index
above the 95th centile) has increased from 3.9% to 11.4% for boys and
4.3% to 9.9% for girls between surveys in 1963-5 and 1988-9. In the United Kingdom, the findings of the national study indicate general increases in children's weight and skinfold thickness across the whole population.
Evidence from experimental and longitudinal cohort studies shows
that overweight children are likely to suffer from psychological
problems. It has been observed that by six years old children have
picked up societal messages that overweight is undesirable, and
overweight children may encounter rejection and become socially
isolated, or they may develop a distorted body image. Recent research
has shown poorer outcomes for overweight and obese boys than for
girls.13 The social burden of obesity affects educational
attainment and interpersonal relationships.14 Obese
children have an increased risk of psychosocial and psychological problems that can persist into adulthood.
Persistent obesity in childhood is associated with other lifestyle
related diseases that may persist in adulthood. These include
cardiovascular diseases, non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (now
occurring in children), osteoarthritis, breast and alimentary cancers,
skin disorders, aggravation of rheumatic diseases, and asthma and other
respiratory diseases.15 Childhood obesity increases the
risk of childhood hyperinsulinaemia, hypertension, and dyslipidaemia.
Odds ratios for these findings in obese children were 2.4 for raised
diastolic blood pressure, 3.0 for raised low density lipoprotein
fraction of cholesterol, 3.4 for raised high density fraction, 4.5 for
raised systolic blood pressure, 7.1 for raised triglycerides, and 12.6 for low fasting insulin. Two or more risk factors were present in 58%
of obese children.16
Overweight children are twice as likely as normal children to be
obese as adults.17 Evidence from a systematic review of
risk factors for obesity18 and two birth cohort
studies
17 19
showed that children with overweight or
obese parents have a higher risk of obesity
79% of 10-14 year old
children with at least one obese parent were obese
regardless of
whether the parental obesity is of genetic or environmental origin.
However, identifying children at risk of persistent obesity is an
inexact science. Current body status, having an obese parent, and early
occurrence of the adiposity rebound (at around 5 years) may predict
obesity in adulthood.20 These findings are important as
they show that progression from childhood to adult obesity is not
inevitable and intervention may be effective.
The earlier the intervention the better, and much research has
therefore focused on children aged 5-12.6-21 The results
of relevant clinical trials are summarised in reviews of the
literature.
6 7 22
In most of these trials the children were followed up for about a year (range 0-10 years). Each review documents the importance of diet, activity, and behaviour change as
components of management of obesity. One review also considered the
benefits of treatment on metabolic variables and psychological wellbeing.7 Several different dietary approaches
successfully reduced calorie intake and improved eating behaviour. The
addition of activity (both supervised and unsupervised) improves long
term chances of weight control.
6 7
The following are
findings from randomised controlled trials included in these
reviews.
6 7
A balanced reduced calorie diet (focusing on eating
fewer energy dense foods) given in line with dietary guidelines
for example, Epstein's "traffic light" diet, which divides foods into "coloured" groups according to whether they can be consumed freely (green), with discretion (yellow), or should be strictly limited)
was more effective than no diet. Trials of hypocaloric diets, protein modified fasts, fibre supplementation and prescription of the anorectic agent fenfluramine were all ineffective in reducing weight.
One study with a 10 year follow up found
diet plus encouragement of healthy physical activities was more effective over time than either diet with aerobic exercises or diet
with calisthenics. Another study showed that reinforcing a decrease in
sedentary behaviour resulted in greater weight loss than reinforcing an
increase in activity or reinforcing both behaviours
for example,
encouraging children to watch less television is more effective than
encouraging them to participate in sports. Three studies showed
exercise was more effective than no exercise.
Behaviour modification
Two trials found that behaviour
modification was effective, and a third found greater effects with behaviour modification than with education alone.
Parental effects
Individual studies found that parents are
better agents of change than children; parental training and family therapy were effective; and treating parents and children together can
be better than treating children on their own.
This evidence indicates that emphasis should be placed on
individualising behavioural treatments for obesity. Even parents who
are themselves intractably obese have an important role in supporting
children up to age 8.22 The circumstances in which the
intervention is delivered and by whom may be as important as its
content.23 Some treatment strategies seem to be working but there is no clear consistency in effectiveness. The observed effects on loss of weight or of fat are modest, suggesting that overweight and obesity are resistant to treatment, partly because to
have any effect interventions need to be complex, partly because such
interventions do not alter the context of the obese child's environment external to the family. Environmental, psychological, and
sociodemographic factors tend to be ignored.6
A recent expert committee's review of ways of preventing and treating
childhood obesity, including diet and physical activity, provides an
informative background to the use of family therapy and improving
parenting skills for weight management.10 Its general
recommendations include the following.
School based programmes for preventing and treating obesity
Schoolteachers are in daily contact with children during term time
for at least 11 years, and school nurses, for example, are well placed
to spot the overweight child at an early stage and to help to prevent
obesity developing. Schools provide a safe environment, a
curriculum programme, can ensure that school lunches are healthy, and
have facilities for physical activities supervised by trained staff.
School based prevention interventions that are integrated into the
normal curriculum or school health promotion activities, with the aim
of reducing risk factors for cardiovascular disease, show
promise.24 Typically, these interventions involve a
multifaceted approach to the whole child that includes diet, physical
activity, and other educational and psychological components. Efforts
which emphasise activity and building of self esteem may minimise
concerns about inadvertently giving rise to eating disorders.
|
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Applying the evidence |
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You show your patient where he fits on the growth and body mass index percentile charts and you discuss the principles of management of overweight with the child and his parents. You teach the family about healthy eating habits (following dietary guidelines) that are sustainable throughout life but explain that dietary restriction in childhood may interfere with normal growth and development. Because the boy has not reached puberty and should still be growing, you encourage him to slow his rate of weight increase or maintain his weight, rather than to lose weight, so that he "grows into his weight." (After puberty, you would have recommended him to lose weight at 0.5-1 kg per week.)
You explain that "lifestyle activities" such as walking and
cycling
activities that are sustainable throughout life
are more effective for weight control than other forms of exercise, and you
devise a programme for this boy. Because more vigorous activities expose a child's overweight, you choose activities that will be enjoyable and will not make him look ridiculous or embarrass him. You
explain that increased physical activity will benefit long term weight
management and psychological and emotional wellbeing and will protect
against diseases associated with obesity.
You acknowledge that for the child the psychosocial consequences of
obesity are the most important. You offer some strategies to help him
cope with the teasing or bullying he is experiencing at school and to
improve his self esteem.25 You ask the parents' permission to discuss these with the school. Because the family's patterns of eating and exercise are well established and the child's excess weight may have a genetic component, you devise a behavioural treatment programme that is individualised for the child and acceptable to the family. You explain to the parents that counselling and further
education and instruction in parenting skills may be useful to help
them facilitate behaviour change in this child.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Series editor: Virginia A Moyer Virginia.A.Moyer{at}uth.tmc.edu
Competing interests: None declared.
Evidence Based Pediatrics
and Child Health can be purchased through the BMJ Bookshop
(www.bmjbookshop.com); further information and updates
for the book are available on www.evidbasedpediatrics.com
| |
References |
|---|
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| 1. | World Health Organization. Obesity: preventing and managing the global epidemic. Geneva: WHO, 1998. |
| 2. |
Dietz WH, Bellizzi M.
Workshop on childhood obesity: summary of the discussion.
Am J Clin Nutr
1999;
70:
S126-S130 |
| 3. |
Cole TJ, Bellizzi MC, Flegal KM, Dietz WH.
Establishing a standard definition for child overweight and obesity worldwide: international survey.
BMJ
2000;
320:
1240-1243 |
| 4. | Campbell K, Waters E, O'Meara S, Summerbell C. Interventions for preventing obesity in children (Cochrane review). Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2001;1:CD001871. |
| 5. | Summerbell C, Waters E, Edmunds L, O'Meara S, Campbell K. Interventions for treating obesity in childhood (Protocol for a Cochrane review). Cochrane Library, Issue 2, 2001. Oxford: Update Software. |
| 6. | Glenny A-M, O'Meara S. Systematic review of interventions in the treatment and prevention of obesity. NHS Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, University of York. York: York Publishing Services, 1997. |
| 7. |
Epstein LH, Myers MD, Raynor HA, Saelens BE.
Treatment of pediatric obesity.
Pediatrics
1998;
101:
554-570 |
| 8. | Owens S, Gutin B, Allision J, Riggs S, Ferguson M, Litaker M, et al. Effect of physical training on total and visceral fat in obese children. Med Sci Sports Exerc 1999; 31: 143-148[Medline]. |
| 9. | Golan M, Fainaru M, Weizman A. Role of behaviour modification in the treatment of childhood obesity with parents as the exclusive agents of change. Int J Obes 1998; 22: 1217-1224. |
| 10. | Barlow SE, Dietz WH. Obesity evaluation and treatment: expert committee recommendations. Pediatrics 1998; 102: E29 (www.pediatrics.org/cgi/content/full/102/3/e29). |
| 11. | Flegal KM. The obesity epidemic in children and adults: current evidence and research issues. Med Sci Sports Exerc 1999; 31: S509-S514[Medline]. |
| 12. |
Hughes JM, Li L, Chinn S, Rona RJ.
Trends in growth in England and Scotland, 1972 to 1994.
Arch Dis Child
1997;
76:
182-189 |
| 13. | Wake M, Salmon L, Waters E. Health status of overweight/obese and underweight children: a population based survey. Supplement to Pediatric Research 2000;47(part 2):A943. |
| 14. |
Gortmaker SL, Must A, Perrin JM, Sobol AM, Dietz WH.
Social and economic consequences of overweight in adolescence and young adulthood.
N Engl J Med
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1008-1012 |
| 15. | Black D. Obesity: a report of the Royal College of Physicians. J R Col Physicians 1983; 17: 5-64. |
| 16. |
Freedman DS, Dietz WH, Srinavisian SR, Berenson GS.
The relation of overweight to cardiovascular risk factors among children and adolescents: the Bogalusa heart study.
Pediatrics
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103:
1175-1182 |
| 17. |
Whitaker RC, Wright JA, Pepe S, Seidel KD, Dietz WH.
Predicting obesity in young adulthood from childhood and parental obesity.
N Engl J Med
1997;
337:
869-873 |
| 18. | Parsons TJ, Power C, Logan S, Summerbell CD. Childhood predictors of adult obesity. Int J Obes 1999; 23(Suppl 8): S1-107[CrossRef]. |
| 19. |
Lake JK, Power C, Cole TJ.
Child to adult body mass index in 1958 British birth cohort: associations with parental obesity.
Arch Dis Child
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376-381 |
| 20. | Whitaker RC, Pepe- S, Wright A, Seidel KD, Dietz WH. Early adiposity rebound and the risk of adult obesity. Pediatrics 1998; 101: E5. |
| 21. | Haddock CK, Shadish WR, Klesges RC, Stein RJ. Treatments for childhood and adolescent obesity. Ann Behav Med 1994; 16: 235-244. |
| 22. |
Gill TP.
Key issues in the prevention of obesity.
Br Med Bull
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53:
359-388 |
| 23. | Biddle SJH, Fox KR, Edmunds L. Physical activity promotion in primary health care in England. London: Health Education Authority, 1994. |
| 24. | Story M. School-based approaches for preventing and treating obesity. Int J Obes 1999; 23(Suppl 2): S43-S51[CrossRef]. |
| 25. | French SA, Story M, Perry CL. Self-esteem and obesity in children and adolescents: A literature review. Obes Res 1995; 3: 479-490[Medline]. |
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