According to a study conducted by the University of Mississippi, vitamin D may
help obese children and teens stave off diabetes, a growing concern in the U.S.
Not exact matches
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends breastfeeding as a way to
help reduce your
child's risk of becoming overweight or
obese.
«As the number of
obese children with high cholesterol continues to grow, we need to have effective lifestyle modifications to
help them reverse their risk factors for heart disease,» Dr. Macknin said.
The findings, he says, could also
help explain the obesity epidemic in countries like China, where the
children of poorly nourished mothers are now
obese, middle - aged adults.
Anderson and her co-author are unable to say with any certainty that eating dinner together more often, getting more sleep, and watching less TV will
help any given
child lose weight, because of the other factors that may contribute to a
child's obesity (or that may protect normal - weight
children from becoming
obese).
Health care providers might be better able to
help their overweight and
obese patients by screening for sleep disorders, according to researchers Jean - Philippe Chaput, of the
Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, and Angelo Tremblay, of Laval University in Quebec.
If a
child has likelihood to be
obese, proper sleep will
help protect him or her against future risk.
This
helps to prevent the overweight /
obese children from being singled out and supports and encourages parents to follow suit, as schools have the power to influence and ultimately change health and educational outcomes for life.
We know that a third of
children are now overweight or
obese by year six and healthy school meals provide a good dietary balance which
helps combat this worrying statistic, and is vital for growth and development.
Drs. Katherine Bauer, Julie Lumeng, and Kendrin Sonneville from the University of Michigan offer a commentary (10.1542 / peds.2018 - 0233) that
helps us better focus on
helping parents who we know want to protect their
children from the social and health - related consequences of becoming overweight or
obese, but do so in a pejorative way.