Word to Parents
Helping an overweight child can be a touchy matter. Here are some practical pointers from professionals
By Claudia Wallis

ILLUSTRATION FOR TIME BY GARY BASEMAN
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June 7, 2004
Nobody wants his kid to be fat. Aside from the serious health
issues, there's the gym-class issue, the
last-one-picked-for-the-team issue, the clothes-shopping issue
and, alas, the meanness issue. Being an overweight kid is often
painful. Other kids can be cruel; even teachers can be biased.
And, let's face it, a blubbery kid is a bad reflection on the
parent. It suggests too much junk food in the pantry, too much
time in front of the TV and other failures of parental
oversight. For a parent who also carries too many pounds, it's
one more thing to feel awful about.
A child who's overweight as a teenager has an 80% chance of being
overweight as an adult, so preventing obesitywith family meals
that instill good eating habits and family outings that involve
plenty of activityis a parent's best bet. But what if you've
lost that bet? What if your child is one of the 30% of kids who
are either overweight or "at risk"? How can you turn the tide
without making him or her more miserable, more resentful of you
and more obsessed with eating, or, just as perilous, not eating?
Here are some pointers from experts:
1. FACE UP TO THE PROBLEM
It's easy to tell yourself that your child is going through a
chubby phase. But your pediatrician's growth and body mass index
charts don't lie. "You should begin to be concerned if you see
rapid, abnormal upward weight divergence," says psychotherapist
Ellyn Satter, author of Secrets of Feeding a Healthy Family. If,
over two years, you see a child's weight jump, say, from the 25th
to the 75th percentile of the average weight for his age while
his height stays at the 50th percentile, then there's cause for
concern.
2. IT'S A FAMILY AFFAIR
Don't focus on a problem child. It's better to get the whole
family eating right, starting with yourself. If you don't know
how to do that, consult a dietitian or nutritionist. Parents have
a lot of control over the diet of children under age 10. Change
your own ways, and the kids will change theirs. Children tend to
mimic their father's eating habits, observes dietitian Marilyn
Tanner, who works with obese children at St. Louis Children's
Hospital. Introduce more fruits, vegetables and whole grains at
meals, even if they aren't your favorites. Tanner's message to
dads: "Pretend you like it."
3. TAKE A SEAT
Sit-down family dinners offer the best opportunity for building
good eating habits. Not only do they enable you to keep an eye on
what your child eats, but they also tend to be more well-rounded
than meals eaten on the run, and kids are less apt to bolt them
down. Dinnertime talk can also reveal emotional issues that might
underlie overeating. If you can't do it every night, aim for
three or four family dinners a week. Satter stresses that even
snacks should be "structured, sit-down [meals] served at set
times" with no grazing in between.
4. MAKE IT FUN. TRY NEW THINGS
Nutritionists and dietitians believe in a healthy or even playful
involvement with good food. Sharron Dalton, a professor of
nutrition at New York University, suggests a "fruit ceremony."
Buy one unusual fruit (or vegetable) a week and do a family taste
test together. Don't give up on a new food just because it didn't
go over well the first time. Says Tanner: "Research shows that
sometimes it takes 10 to 15 introductions." Brussels sprouts,
anyone?
5. WHAT TO SAY AND NOT TO SAY
It's easy for kids to become obsessed with the scale. Tanner
suggests talking about nutrients instead of pounds. "Have a
meeting to discuss the family's health without singling anyone
out," she says. "One thing you don't want to say is, 'I've got
one skinny kid and one overweight kid.'" Sometimes kids want to
talk about a weight problem, but it's best to listen for their
cues, says psychiatrist Denise Wilfley of Washington University
in St. Louis, Mo. Books can also open up conversations. For ages
9 to 12, Dalton suggests Paula Danziger's The Cat Ate My
Gymsuit, Judy Blume's Blubber or Jelly Belly by Robert Kimmel
Smith.
6. UNPLUG, GET MOVING
One of the few things proved to prevent obesity is getting kids
to watch less TV. The American Academy of Pediatrics advises
setting limits on television and computer time and keeping TVs
out of kids' rooms. To encourage activity, keep the bicycle tires
pumped; buy a badminton set; plan a hike. And walk the walk: the
best way to get your kids off the sofa is to get up yourself.
Reported by Leslie Whitaker/Chicago
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