Probiotics for children and pregnant and nursing mothers. Specially formulated for infants and children with a unique probiotic and prebiotic blend co... more
If you are concerned your child may be obese set an appointment with your family doctor for a screening and diagnosis. The doctor can calculate your child's body mass index and determine where it falls on the national BMI-for-age growth chart. The BMI-for-age growth chart indicates if your child is overweight for his or her age and height. The doctor can determine your child's percentile, which means how your child compares to other children of the same sex and age.
These growth charts are established by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and help to identify overweight children. If your child's BMI-for-age is between 85th and 95th percentiles, he or she is at risk of being overweight. If your child's BMI-for-age is over the 95th percentile, he or she is overweight.
Your doctor will factor in things like being muscular or having a larger-than-average body frame because the BMI does not consider these things. Growth patterns vary greatly aong children and are another factor the doctor will consider before making an overall weight assessment.
During this assessment the doctor will probably also take into consideration the following:
It is probably a good idea to take along a notebook with the above information to have ready for your doctor at the time of the weight assessment. Keep a record of what your child eats for a two week period to give to your doctor for his review.
Obesity in children is a serious health problem that can result in diabetes and heart disease. Review the following health problems that can result from children being overweight:
A child who is overweight may also suffer from social and emotional problems that include:
Source: Mayo clinic (2006)
Disclaimer: This article is not meant to diagnose, treat or cure any kind of a health problem. Always consult with your health care provider about any kind of a health problem.
Copyright 2007 Connie Limon. Please visit us at http://nutritionandhealthhub.com and sign up for our weekly health and nutrition tip. Articles are FREE to publish to your newsletters, website or blog.