The Knowledge Board:

Obesity

Childhood obesity

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- give us your thoughts

Hi I'm Belinda
I'm your community manager at The Patients Voice.
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Below a some key words under discussion in this blog

Childhood obesity, diabetes, BMI, BMI Scale

Welcome to the latest ResBlog (online research web log) for The Patients Voice.

For this study we are interested in determining what factors parent perceive contribute significantly to childhood obesity. The purpose of this blog is to help us frame a research project into childhood obesity by finding out the issues which are important to people who suffer from the condition. So your contribution is vital!

Childhood obesity is a condition that affects children. It is characterized by a weight well above the mean for their height and age and a body mass index (BMI) well above the norm. It is estimated that 1 in 5 UK children are obese.

Click here for a link to find out your or your childs’ BMI

Part of this blog will explore your thoughts on what parent can do to influence the food choices their children make.

Feel very free to tell us your story. In particular we are interested in the following questions

• How much of an influence do you think the online advertising of fast food has on children food choices?
• What measures should parents take to ensure that children make healthy food choices?

Thanks very much in advance for your help. Please feel free to check back on the blog to see what others have said and perhaps contribute further thoughts.

As with all our market research projects, of which this ResBlog is one example, the responses of people who participate are anonymous. This in line with market research codes of conduct. To participate all you need to do is scroll down to the comments area, type a nickname of your choice and then put your comments into the box. To find out more about what we do both in terms of work for our clients and our patient communities and resources please feel free to explore our web site further if you have not already done so?

I look forward to reading your comments and, of course, thank you very much for your input. Finally can I ask you to bear in mind when you blog that you comments will not just be read by other bloggers and The Patients’ Voice team but also , in some cases, the clients for whom we work.

Best wishes

Belinda

PS: Please feel free to share this blog with anyone who you think might find it of interest.

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Julie Brannan | 06/07/2007 09:52:00

I find that the statitics for childhood obesity do not reflect what I see every day. I am a childminder and have children of my own. I watch my childrens peers going to and form school every day. If there is one obese child per class it is as much. Pretty much the same as when I was at school. Where are they all? Is it really such a big issue.

Big Daddy | 06/07/2007 10:03:00


I do think the media does has a degree of influence on our children - online and television. I don't know what it is but they are just attracted to the brand and especially McDonalds. The greater influence however has to be the parents. I use fast food as a treat and determine the frequency of when they would get it. This also has to be balanced with what they consume at home...talk to your kids, make them understand the importance of eating well

Jo Lovell | 06/07/2007 10:20:00


I think childhood obseity is due to modern lifestyles, the lack of physical education in schools, modern toys and parents who are scared to let their children out of their sights. The freedom given to us as children is no longer around and afterschool clubs which provide exercise are expensive and unaffordable to many. Also the amount of additives in food today was unheard of years ago, and many sweetners affects the body in ways that are much worse than sugar. Stop using artificial substances in food and go back to the old ways and things are better. My children are not fat, but they DO NOT get artificial sweetners and I cook with natural ingredients including sugar and they are fine.

Caroline Young | 06/07/2007 10:22:00

Its all about educating your children, its the responsibilty of the parent to monitor what children eat and how much TV they watch, how much running around they do etc. Although the media has to take a responsible attitude towards marketing for children the parent has the final say.

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Rachybobbins | 06/07/2007 10:28:00

I agree with Gordon Ramsay, you should educate your kids on what they are eating and should also take responsibility for what they eat. In a world dominated by fast food we should all be aware of the benefits of taking time out each day to spend time together as a family with a properly cooked healthy meal. Children are of course influenced by what they see on television whether it be toy advertisements or food, I limit the amount of television my son watches and we spend time together doing other things...reading, drawing, painting etc.

David Pyall | 06/07/2007 11:06:00

Since the authorities sold off all the school playing fields in London to make a quick buck we have had a problem with obese children. I know this is only one factor, but they all count. More sports facilities for children would reduce the obesity levels.



Jo Bryan | 06/07/2007 11:28:00

I do see childhood obesity you only have to sit in a park or on a beach and see whole families who are medically overweight.

I believe its parents relying on fast food, fried food and definitely takeaways. More convenient as more women take to the working world.

Junk food is cheaper than fresh fruit, vegetables and meat. Healthy breads, margerines etc are more expensive to buy than more fattening unhealthy store cupboard fillers.

The majority of parents don't try to educate there children in health and nutrition. Included in this is exercise. Children do less exercise as they reach teens choosing consoles and TV.


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Karina Miller | 06/07/2007 11:38:00


I feel that there is no difference in children weight as when I was a child I do fell however that children do not play outside much due the the way of the times changing. We are unable to allow our children to play outside as much due to problem areas and that there are not as many youuth groups that are still open. Children are hard done by and tend to either sit at home watching tv or playing on there computers this does worry me. We are a busy family both parents working full time 4 days on then 4 off we always have one parent at home but it's very expensive to take children on days out as this costs more than £100 each time with 2 adults and 3 children. You can read,draw etc. But children need more than this what is the country to do.

Mammie Ndoko | 06/07/2007 11:45:00


I think that the media causes alot of problems. Negative body image can cause depression and social problems - overweight children are often teased. Low self-esteem may not directly affect physical health, but it is the biggest problem encountered. It may even lead to 'comfort eating', exacerbating the situation. If our culture placed less emphasis on the 'perfect body', then atleast one set of issues associated with obesity would vanish.

A toomer | 06/07/2007 11:59:00

As parents, bombarded with healthy eating education, we should know by now what is a good and bad diet for our kids. I find it's just a case of limiting poor food such as crisps, fatty foods, sweets and cakes. I don't feel it right to ban these foods, but to eat and enjoy in moderation. At the same I always have pleanty of fruit for snacks as well as providing propper meals which avoids 'grazing' on poor foods. Eating properly is incorproated in our family way of life and in the family rules, it's never been too dificult as I lead from example and concequently we are all a good BMI and have no hang-ups about food.


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Kelly | 06/07/2007 12:29:00

While on holiday it was amazing to see the greek familys enjoying family meal times with nutritious healthy food while the british familys were crammed into the only Mcdonalds in the vicinity, with the kids moaning and their fat bodies crammed into their swimsuits. I really did feel embarrassed to be british . Fast food has become the staple diet to alot of familys and the fault lies with the parents. Fast food is a treat in our household. It really isn,t difficult to work out what is right from wrong but then ignorance is bliss !

shiva | 06/07/2007 12:31:00

It is a myth that junk food is cheaper than fresh food a fast food take out for a family of 4 is going to cost a minimum of £8.00 I can feed my family using fresh ingredients, including fruit and vegetables on less than £1.00 a head for the evening meal. I have been on a low income and/or benefits while my children were growing up and quite frankly I could never afford take-away options. As for not having enough time to prepare fresh meals, on the occassions I have been lucky enough to be working full time I still prepared fresh food for the evening meal. Also 3 year olds do not do the weekly shopping therefore it is up to the parent to buy and prepare nutritious healthy food, and if the kid is whinging to be consistent and to say no and mean no. Kids do learn from parents,and that includes whether a parent will give in and keep changing their mind if the kid keeps whinging, they do not bother starting if they know no is their final answer.



Sharon | 06/07/2007 13:02:00

I think it depends on the area you live in, in my childs school there are only a couple of overweight children who are not actually obese. It is a small school in a close knit area of mostly stay at home mums, but in other areas of the town I see more children eating junk food who are overweight. I think that lifestyle and education plays a big part in this issus. I also think the education needs to be aimed at the parents more than the children. I have heard my childrens friends talking about things they have seen and heard and it makes them feel unhealthy and at when they are clearly not.



carole | 06/07/2007 13:05:00


Having suffered from overweight as a child myself,which i think was due to my father not allowing us to leave the table until the plate was cleared,i have not done this with my children,allowing them to eat the amount they wanted on the plate.sweets,crisps and other snacks are only given as an occasional treat.Television adverts i feel do definately influence children especially when they are offering toys with their childrens meals,its up to us as parents to say no and mean it when they repeatedly ask for this type of meal.Apart from the cost of these meals, I do not believe they are of any nutritional value and its far better and cheaper to prepare meals at home.Once achild has learnt that their persistent whinging has no effect on you they will stop.Organnic foods although slighty more expensive than the norm are much better health wise, having no chemicals and fertilizers added they are grown naturally.

Choosyjo | 06/07/2007 13:16:00

I believe parents are responsible for what their children eat. I know it can be difficult to ensure your children are eating healthily but it can be done (if you are as hard as nails and twice as stubborn as your children).

I think food manufacturers also have a responsibility and that there is far too much processed,fast food available.

Part of the problem is that most mothers work now and they have a limited time for food preparation - it's very easy and quicker to open a packet and nuke it. I do not buy the argument that it is cheaper to use processed food. I buy fresh and save money so I think it is a time issue and of course pressure from the children to buy all the items they see advertised.

Another contributer to childhood obesity is lack of exercise. When my children were young they were always outside - playing ball games,riding their bikes,playing tag etc. TV was watched for about half an hour a day. These days you do not see children playing outside on a regular basis.

As commented by Shiva, young children do not do the food shopping so it really is down to the parent(s) to buy fresh,nutritious food and to limit the snacks. It can be done - neither of my children are obese and I do not think that they suffered when I said no. I admit that at the time it was easier for me as the amount of junk food available was far less and,I think, the advertising less aggressive.


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Gary | 06/07/2007 13:19:00

Lack of excercise, ie sports at schools + computer games in their bedrooms sitting playing comp games + eating rubbish food/snacks. I'm a Window Cleaner and i have never seen so many kids bedrooms with empty crisps,sweets,takeaway food wrappers etc lying around + upon their bed side tables numurous asthma inhalers this medication i believe is a result of their lungs not getting enough excercise.

KAS | 06/07/2007 13:34:00

I think it is a very complex issue and has many answers. I agree that the stats must be too high because there are very few in my childs school. Unfortunately she is one of them and it is not through sweets, fizzy drinks, crisps or junk food.

We do not have those foods in the house. She only found out the other day that crisps come in more than 4 flavours and she is now 9. I only buy them when feeding other kids (who don't have a weight issue) who only eat junk food.

Sweets, she doesn't really like. She loves the idea, but eats a few then they go in the cupboard and visiting children eat them. She never eats what comes in party bags. I do not buy many cakes or biscuits, nor do I make them. I limit it to one cake or one pack of biscuits per month.

We eat fairly healthily, most food is freshly prepared and always eat fresh veg and fruit. All pasta and bread is wholemeal, rice is brown. Took a while to get her to eat it, but now tastes better than white. She is not a very fussy child and will eat most things you put in front of her. Fast food is limited to twice a month.

Her excess weight is only on her torso. Arms and legs are fine. She has been like it since birth and yes she was breast fed and no she didn't have a high birth weight. She is tall for her age, height of an eleven year old.

Lack of regular exercise was a problem, but I've been addressing that for both of us. My problem is I eat too much and don't exercise enough. I also eat when stressed or upset - so emotional eating is a feature. Whether it is for her, I haven't sussed yet.

I never talk about dieting to her, we just talk about eating healthy food and exercising. She does have a gluten and lactose intollerance. For 2 years we tried to keep to gluten free foods but didn't make any real impact on her weight, nor does cutting out dairy. But intake of dairy does actually upset her physically, so that does not feature much in her diet.

So this to me is a real issue and I have gone on nutrition workshops to try to understand what we should both eat and do generally keep to the guidelines.

I think my bottom line is really exercise, which is going to take a sustained effort. If after 6 months it has not made any tangible difference, then I am going to check out any other medical causes because I am doing what I can.

I do have one gripe though. When she stays with friends, I often have the parents saying what a good eater she is, not fussy, will eat what they give her, but they give her more because she has eaten it all! She doesn't need it.

 

 

 

 



JJ | 06/07/2007 13:48:00

I have suffered a weight problem all of my life, when my two son's were born I did not want them to go through ther ridicule I went through at school. I have never put them on a diet but they have always ate healthly and yes they have had treats but on the whole they have never eaten the amounts of junk food that children eat today. No doubt they ate some junk food at school but at home they came in to a healthy meal ate fruit and veg from a very early age, even liquidised it when they were babies, and they ate what we ate as adults, none of the jar/powder foods just fresh meat, fruit and vegetables, they enjoyed their dinners when they were asked what they would like for dinner they would say "meat green trees and white trees" (cauliflower and Broccoli), they would try foods from other countries at an early age too, so as adults they like a wide variety of foods and are average weight for their height and are really two fine young men, they always enjoyed being active, they did on occasions sit and play games on their X box, but majority of times they be out doors in all weathers playing 5 aside football or out on their bikes. Good healthy food prepared and cooked yourself is my answer, these fast foods/ prepared meals are FAT foods. I must say I have not bought organis foods, I don't believe in paying the extra because I have no proof that it is organic. I think the only full proof organic foods is if you've grown them yourself then you do know what they have been fed on.

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boo2u | 06/07/2007 15:19:00

Just to put a spoke in the wheel, I find that no matter how hard I try to give my children "healthy" food, the problem is choice... all there friends and peers can eat what they want when they want, the same at school, lunch time passes and chips, at times I just give in. PS what happend to family meals when we all sat down togeather and ate a square meal... is there time??. I do belive that it is a parenting issue first.. but with out back up from school and other pearants it is a battle lost i feel.

Caro Ness | 06/07/2007 15:35:00

I agree with Caroline Young. We live in such a nanny state and a blame culture these days that passing the buck seems to be a way of life. It's time we all too respnsibility for ourselves and our children. There is no excuse for not attempting to educate yourself and your child in what is good for the body....



Colin Hughes | 06/07/2007 16:14:00

I am not sure that obesity is as prevalent as made out. I dont think there are many fatter children in my son's class. Mind you we live in a small town and exercise is easy - perhaps the stats are different in the cities

angela | 06/07/2007 18:13:00


I am sick to death with people going on about childhood obesity. There are hundereds of children who are under weight but we don't here the government accusing these parents of starving their children and making out they are bad parents and threatening to take their children into care like they do with obese children. The reason why? because if a child refuses to eat it is seen as a mental illness but if a child over eats it is judged as been greedy and it's parents bad. I am the mum of 3 children, 2 of whom were over weight and one slightly underweight. For years i was made to feel guilty because of my childrens weights and because i myself was over weight it was always surgested that i was over feeding. It took me 18 months to pursuade a Doctor to do genetic testing on my children as i knew something was not right and that i was feeding my 3 children all the same. It turned out that i as well as my 2 over weight children and 10 other family members were all suffering from a genetic condition called MC4r in which our MC4 gene does not work and it can't use the hormone Leptin. This causes us to be over weight and we are now taking part in studies to find a cure. The Doctors have told us that as many as 5% of the population who are over weight could have this genetic defect and we would never have known about this but for genetic testing. There could be many children out there suffering from this defect who are being forced to diet, exersice like mad and made to feel it is all their own fault being overweight when in fact dieting and exersice can actually make this condidtion worse as the body believes it is actually under weight which is why it keeps on storing fat and dieting and exersice and cause the persons metabolizim to shut down even further to conserve energy. We are breeding a nation of children who are going to grow up with phobia's concerning food and children are bullyied enough at school without being made to feel worse because of all the healthy eating we constantly get told about. I don't believe there is a parent in the uk who doesn't know what is fattening and what is not. There are no bad foods if everything is eaten in moderation. We are going to have a lot of adults with week bones in years to come because of constant dieting. I see more adults who look underweight than over weight and i know which i think looks worse. Why do people want to look like someone out of starving Africa when we are so lucky in what food is available, it is an insult to people who are genuinly starving.

claire2703 | 06/07/2007 20:43:00

As parents my husband and I try very hard to give our children the best possible diet. We believe in fresh fruit and veg but also in moderation and allowing treats such as chocolate so these items don't become forbidden foods. I believe the main problems are high fat foods and lack of exercise.

jungle | 06/07/2007 21:15:00

The big problem we face is the fact that most parents are so overstretghed financually that both parents are working. These leaves little time for the Mother to spend time preparing meals for all the family. Thus we end up with everybody eating at different times and probably quick meals. When the economic situation changes we will probably get back to the years when only DAD worked and Mum spent time looking after everybody.

 

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karen lewin | 06/07/2007 21:20:00

my daughter is actually underweight due to pressure from others at school, she is 5' 5'' and weighs 7 stone and is size 6-8. she is still being called fat! she has lost 1 1/2 stones in 6 months, hiding food etc:- i have always given her well balanced home-made meals and was always proud that she would eat anything. she is now so picky with her food that i have to hide veg in it. i hear parents say that you can't eat healthy food cheaply, buying processed 'ping' meals and oven ready everything, is actually dearer than making your own.

Helen D | 06/07/2007 21:40:00

I don't see many obese children at school so I'm not too sure how accurate the statistics are.

I have 3 children all brought up on the same diet, breastfed for 10+ months & weaned on a huge variety of pureed veg & fruit. However the youngest, nearly 6, who has a tendency to be overweight, will now only eat 2 or 3 vegetables & no fruit at all, whilst the other two continue to eat a whole variety of healthy foods. We have a 'cooked from scratch' family meal together every day but nothing will persuade her to try anything else on offer.

So my experience is - whilst parents can offer a healthy diet they cannot persuade a strong willed child!!



happydadtoo | 06/07/2007 22:44:00

convenience foods and parental indifference and idleness all contribute equally.

Get off your butt and cook food from scratch for your children and then get outside with them whenever you can rather than slob out.

All three of my children are tall and slim - because of the above.

Indolence = obesity





Anthony J. Martin | 07/07/2007 07:07:00


Patrents have a duty to bring up their children with effectiveness. Allowing a child to have what it wants all the time is not training them for the future.

The parents additional knowledge should also be used to teach and direct the child, otherwise we will not have a useful member of society.


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mother of 5 | 07/07/2007 17:31:00


As a parent of lots of kids and little money in the past to feed them on I could not afford to go to fast food places. income support only stretches so far when you have bills to pay. We were all fit well and healthy, walked alot and eat lots of fruit and veg and a little meat and very few snacks.

Now i have a good job, a car, I am over weight (partly due to stress depression and prescribed medicines) but i have 5 wonderful right sized kids. They walk to / from school daily, packed lunches, enjoy after school clubs involving sports, and I control the amount of crisps and chocolate we have in the house. I decide what meals we have and when, so I belive that doing is better than just saying. They understand what over weight is and how it has affected my health. They are now seeing the weight come off with a controlled diet which i have described as lots of new recipies to try. I take them to keep fit with me and they love that.

They are encouraged in each of thier schools to eat sensibly ( no crisps and chocolate snacks etc allowed in school) advise is given for parents who make up packed lunches. The PTFA provide a breakfast club and healthy food options at break time. Lots of sports encouraged as Fun.

Information, knowledge and motivation to use what you know to best your best advantage is the key.

Families on low incomes - do they actually get anough money for food each week to suport the HEALTHY food diets of their families? Would it help if they all got vouchers for fresh fruit and veg per family member so the money goes to the right food instead of alternatives? !!!!



Alison Alden | 07/07/2007 21:55:00

I feel that a lot of parents have little knowledge regarding nutrition, and labelling can be misleading, like good for you clould read not quite so bad for you, parents sometimes go by this type of marketing ie low fat food that is laden with sugar

Susan | 08/07/2007 09:23:00

Childhood obesity is all around, we are quite lucky where we live as we have a sure start that gives advice, cookey classes on food to eat that children can cook with you and eat well, lots of fruit and vegatables. Their play group has fruit for snack time and sugar free juice ot milk. My two year old loves her healthy eating food. Its nothing for her to go to the fruit bowl and snack on her favourite strawberries and banannas, or into the fridge for cucumber or to tomtoes. Its really down to education and getting the right balance to keep childhood obesity at bay.

lyn f | 08/07/2007 13:56:00


At the end of the day each parent is the person responsibe for their child no matter what it is for ,and its about time we stopped blaming everybody else for our own mistakes

Linda McDonagh | 08/07/2007 14:58:00


I tried everything you can think of to stop my eldest child from over eating. But she persistantly ate as much as she could all the time. I would cook healthy meals for when she came home from school and later college. She always had a packed lunch for her dinner which i prepared. She would steal food from home and when there was nothing that she fancied she stole money from my purse to buy food or chocolate. She even resorted to stealing food from the shop. When she got older and was at college getting EMA she would spend it all in one mad binge and lie on her bed eating it all. By this time she had got too old and too big for us to stop her. I took her to the doctors about her eating and all they said was "we cant help her unless she wants to be helped". I guess this is true but it was like an addiction to her as drugs are to a drug addict. She has since left home and living on a budget but still eats unhealthey food. The parents cannot always be held responsible for their children being overwheight. The child has to take responsibility as well especially when they get older.

Amina | 08/07/2007 20:15:00

My 2 are still very young, but I am determined to ensure that they grow up healthily. I agree with the comments about changes in lifestyles, and meals prepared in a hurry. Poor education is also a factor here. I grew up with computers and tv, but I played outside and seemed to enjoy a lot of freedom that todays' children don't. I also ate the odd McDonalds and KFC growing up, as a treat, and viewed it as such too, not the norm. My mum prepared meals from scratch every night.

I remember 1 or 2 overweight kids, but it wasn't an issue. My mum used to bake cakes every now and then, and I was quite popular with my friends when that happened! I definitely don't recall any of my friends worrying about their weight, well, not at that age anyway.


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emmy | 08/07/2007 22:09:00


I too have a problem with my 16yr old boy eating junk food as often as he can. I stopped buying chocolate biscuits , crisps etc as he was eating far too many but he just buys them himself . I cook healthy meals and always have fresh fruit on hand but he states he does not like the taste and refuses to eat them.He is not yet obese but I am afraid he will be and desperately wish he would change his eating habits, as your children get older you cannot get them to eat as well as you could when they were smaller, the only thing I can say that as a small child I gave him a good start with plenty of healthy foods and hope that he will realise and change his eating habits before he gets too large.



Jayne | 09/07/2007 10:17:00

I see obese children wherever I go. They are children from as young as 2/3 and up to the age of 16/17, no-one else but the parents are to blame for it. There is too much emphasis nowadays on junk food, being driven everywhere, playing on computer games and watching TV as well as not eating at the table as a family at the right times of day.

As a child of the 60s/70s, I grew up walking everywhere and that included 2 miles to school and back every single day, no matter what the weather, it didn't do me any harm, kept me fit and made me independent. We played out...yes outside...with our peers doing physical games such as skipping, rounders, hide and seek and various other games besides riding bikes etc. We ate as a family, at tea time (between 5 and 6pm) EVERY night without fail and it was good, honest, down to earth food such as shpeherds pie, stews etc. We had sweets, of course we did, but we also burned off the calories consumed by doing all that exercise, which we didn't see as such anyway!

Parents these days, and it isn't just the poorer families OR single parents, because I come into BOTH catagories, are all too happy to shove their children in front of the telly with a bag of sweets or crisps from the age they can first sit up. They then graduate to computer games and being driven to school or taken on a bus. They are fed convenience foods eaten in front of the telly again and then they slouch around all night after that instead of playing out.

I know this doesn't apply to all families, but childhood obesity is becoming a major problem and if parents don't start to do something about it there isn't going to be a next generation they are going to be dead before they are 20 at this rate from high blood pressure, high cholesterol, heart disease and the like. Being over weight has so many "knock on" effects, its a major cause of bullying, leading to depression which in turn leads to more eating, it needs stamping out and it doing NOW! All it takes is a few changes in habit and doing things as a family.

Ok rant over sorry it went on a bit!



John Vickery | 09/07/2007 11:02:00


I have 5 Children and ensure they have a proper diet plus plenty of activities.

nads | 09/07/2007 11:06:00


i have four children all are slim build just like i was. i am still very careful what i let my children eat,but i understand it will be harder when they are older an can make choices on the own.

when disscussing obesity i feel there are many factors to blame junk food being one of them. that is were the parents roll is inportant.if we feed our children everything they ask for we only have ourselves to blame if our child becomes over weight. the younger we start to encourge healthy eating the better.

exersise is also very important. i see many parents drive their children to school when the live in a 10/15min walking distance.it is far to convinent to let your child sit in frount of a computer,tv or game boy etc.i really feel children need us to entertain them,give them something to do which is wrong.children should be ecoraged to think for themselves think of activerties the would like to do.they should be encourged to play outside more often and enjoy more outdoor activerties.


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Trish | 09/07/2007 11:17:00


We now live in a consumer society were children get what they want through peer pressure and a ‘must have’ attitude. School sports are vanishing … kids are sat at games consoles / computers playing away for hours on end, parents are too frightened to let them play out in the street, they are driven to and from school (and activities if their lucky).

All the junk they are eating is turning them into sedentary beings that have no inclination to move or partake in activities if they don’t have to. Its chocolate cereals, high fat /salt / sugar lunch then probably a pre-packaged tea … and that’s not including the snacks and sugar soda drinks in-between.

People have forgotten what is really important; a majority of parents are too busy to prepare a home cooked meal as it easier to go to the fridge / freezer and take something out that is pre-packaged. This type of food is full of additives, preservatives sugars and salts … not a good start in life!

Some kids don’t even know how to eat with a knife and fork, which I find horrifying. Patterns are set for life in the early years and if your children live on pre-packaged foods then this is all they will know and crave. We need to go back to basics – proper home cooked food and sitting down at the dinning table. The art of being a family is dying this is one of the fundamentals “of being”



Duncan | 09/07/2007 11:50:00

my 13 year old son weighed in at more than 26 stone, i was very ill at the time and hadn't noticed the weight piling on, the important thing was to form a plan for him both through school and at home the first thing i did was take him to see a dietican and get it through to him about his weight, but the thing was he already new what to do. we through out the frying pans deep fat fryer and we decided together to boil or oven cook all our food. we changed together our eating habits which i think gave him the surport to lose weight. we talked to the doctor and this was important to get the back up from all parties, after one year my son had lost more than 11 stone in weight and still losing. This was done through exsercise good back up from family and the care you have to give. he is now a lot happier and as a very nice cute girlfriend now, also he won an award for losing weight and was on television, which he is very proud of. Give surport and understanding to overweight kids.

debra white | 09/07/2007 12:14:00


I agree that modern living has a lot to do with childhood obesity, e.g. working hours leading to convenience food being used more.

Also sometimes it is a case of the parents needing educating on healthy eating/cooking simply. One problem with healthy foods is the price and it seems that foods on offer or cheaper foods are often the unhealthy ones.

My son is at the moment coming to the end of a brilliant progaramme called MEND, run in the main by Sainsburys. He has had regular fun exercise, team games, tennis, etc and also learnt about healthy eating, labelling of food and had the opportunity to try new foods. We have had menus and also a trip to our local Sainsbury's to look at labels and suchlike. Highly recommended. I have found he has taken more notice when the advice comes from someone other than me! I beleive we need to educate children early on to set them up for a better way of eating in future life.


Governor | 09/07/2007 12:30:00


As a Governor of a Junior School, I believe the main causes of ' Child Obesity ' are
1/. Lack of exercise ie. not walking to/from school
2/. Lack of ' Parental Control '
3/. Children not getting a good breakfast before going to school, it is easier for a parent to lie in bed and give the child some money to buy their own food, which is normally not healthy food

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Deborah M | 09/07/2007 13:08:00

I'm a mum of two and i'm morbidly obese myself, I'm struggling with trying to control my weight. The issues health and emotional that come with being twice your natural body weight are traumatic. For this reason My main goal for my children is that they don't end up like me! When i was a child i was perfect weight and health I grew up on lots of out door play, lots of outdoor sports at school, a healthy meat and 2 veg diet that didn't have all the chemicals added nothing was artificial. I still had sweetis and chocolate but i could have a salad for my lunch at school. It was after leaving that age and suddenly the fast food industry hit us and then pocessed food and tv dinners and food became fast and artifical, and that coupled with a desk job and not knowing how to keep active the weight problem starts. One thing i do know is that i do not want my children to go down the same route. And they are not! I think the key is to lead by example in what you do and what you eat and through education, as a family we go to the gym at weekends the girls think this is exciting they love to go they love having a go on the tread mill, they are too younge to actually use the gym they are 9 and 7 but they are seeing that going to the gym is fun and a normal thing to do when your a teamager and an adult. Food wise we have lots of talks about artifical ingredients and what that does to your metabolism and your bodies biochemisty (I am a medical biochemist by the way but you can get all the info for your children on the internet very easily) we talk about how you balance up your diet to stay fit and healthy we don't discuss weight because im my opinion if you eat a healthy balanced diet with healthy potion sizes and you get good amounts of exercise daily and drink the right amount of water weight is never an issue. The problem i see with helping young people is fast food, peer presure to eat the latest nasty colourful sweet thing. The media advertising of junk food and lack of education for both children and parents. parents need to be shown how to go back to cooking from natural soursed foods like fruits and vegs and lean meats, To many people are shown how to reheat rather than actually cook. our problem is we have 2 generations that have grown up in the junk/fast food era, I have come across young mums in my work that have never eaten what i call a real peice of meat they have lived there entire life on sausages, burgers and chicken nuggets, and they think adding chips to this is all the veg they need, Its appalling these mums feel terrible but don't know what to do because they don't have any cooking skills. I really think the answer is to learn from our past go back to real food with meals of lean meat and veg, reduce the amount of bread paster and rice we eat and stop eating so many fast carbohydrate foods like crisps and biscuits, Get rid of the junk high in fat and salt and get rid of all the artifical foods with artificial additives, Get kids and people dinking water and go back to playing team games and doing things out doors kick your kics out into the garden and throw away the playstation.



Elaine Ritch | 09/07/2007 13:10:00

It is up to parents to nurture their children and through healthy eating and active lifestyles parents teach their children. Modern lifestyles which are cash poor and time poor do not allow for this nurturing. At our school it is obvious which children are taught to be active and eat well, through thier body sizes and their behaviour. Further schools should be also teaching more about food, preporation and have PE daily.

poetsue | 09/07/2007 13:11:00

Our family traditions and moral status for this generation has been greatly denied by our peers. There for the eating habits of a growing generation have been neglected. Children have been left to fend for themselves as lacked door kids to learn without a mothers true cooking ability to eat at proper meal times. Life is running at a fast pace and only micro foods along with the prepacked foods have taken place of what is really needed most a strong family foundation. Children are always encouraged to eat when they want and what they want without proper supervision. So the lack of parent care has taken comfort eating in its place. I blame society and the peer pressure for the neglect of our childrens eating habits.

Mamta Kanabar | 09/07/2007 13:33:00

I think parents should more responsibilities when it comes to feeding their children. Healthy eating should be introduced from the very early age. I understand ready made meal and take away food are much more convenient but eating healthy is even easier and less expensive. You have to use your imagination and creativity. I agree convenience foods are glorified through advertisement which no doubt attract a great deal of children to try these food. However before children become aware of fast food they must be use to eating the healthy food otherwise once they are use to eating fast unhealthy food they find eating healthy food very difficult. So the trick is start early otherwise it will be too late.

wayne | 09/07/2007 14:00:00

My 15 year old son is overweight

he plays rugby for a club and for school and trains regularly. he east sensibly (all our household do) he is nearly always playing some kind of sport yet still has a weight problem.

why?

well but myself and his mum are over weight too as is his younger brother and i think some of it HAS to be down to genetic make up.

as for childhood obesity being more prevelent? i'd say yes it is. there certainly seems to be more over weight kids around that thier used to be.


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Nicola Harris | 09/07/2007 14:09:00

Both of my children are normal weight. (aged 4 and 8)

I do not worry about how much they eat.

They have a large choice of food to choose from. I always eat with them but I am not perfect so they do sometimes eat at fast food places, have chocolate spread and sweets.

I think that children know their own bodies until adults interfere. I never make them eat or comment on their body weight. I avoid all talk of diets but we do talk about eating healthy.

I think its when children suffer from emotional trauma that they can put on weight to comfort themselves or when parents put pressure on children by putting them on diets. I think this sets them up for a lifelong battle which the diet industry feeds on. The answer to emotional issues is therapy not another diet.


Ella | 09/07/2007 14:22:00

My 8 year old son is classed as overweight. He is concerned about his weight and being bullied at school.

One problem is the fact that spends regular weekends at his grandparents and they are well known or the large portions they serve for meals. One portion is sufficient for two people.

ANother reason is overweight is due to the fact that he is broad shouldered which he gets from his dad. This means that part of his problems are due to being given too much food - which most of the time he will eat, and also due to his physical attributes.

His weight problem is certainly not due to lack of eating breakfast as he in fact very often tells me off when I don't have time to eat it. I do know that bread is bad for him at it does make him bloated so I counteract this by having very little bread in the house.


CLAIRE | 09/07/2007 14:53:00


Obesity in children is more prevelant.

Young children aren't made to do proper PE lessons anymore. Also in many cases parents many of whom work are so rushed in the evening it is far easier to pull out the ready meal or takeaway to feed their kids on.

I am not blaming parents as such (I am one myself and also struggle to fit it all in) but small things help my two year old can't remember the last time she used the buggy - it is just about redundant but i constantly see children of four and upwards being pushed around in buggies. Many with bottles of milk to keep them quite. (again i am not specificaly blaming parents but we all know it's easier to carry the shopping on the buggy with a child strapped safely inside)

Another thing we parents are guilty of is insisting our children clean the plate or finish most of a meal (I am guilty of this too sometimes). After all children really won't let themselves starve.

Maybe if we start with small steps at an early age they would be more inclined to like general excersise and food that will lead to more rigourous PE lessons and sensible eating later on.

The government is doing it's bit by providing sensible meal options for school lunches but they can't be blamed for the choices parents make a macdonalds/ready meal is fine occasionally but several times a week is pushing it. And in realty if is far cheaper to cook your own meals than forking out for take out's and ready meals.



taximan | 09/07/2007 15:05:00

I am overweight but my kids are not.

I agree that it is the responsibility of the parents to make sure that their kids are healthy, which includes overweight/underweight, and in doing so must show an interest in what they eat as adults as it does influence their kids to a certain degree.

I have been told by many a practitioner that it is not lack of exercise that makes you fat it is what and how much you eat.

Ella sounds like she is making excuses, I apologise if that is not the case, ie many a swimmer is broad shouldered, dad or otherwise, yet you don't see many fat swimmers.


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Pat Stradling | 09/07/2007 15:20:00


Media advertising can be just as influential in a positive way as not, by tslking about healthy food and lifestyle. I do feel that as we do not on the whole need to 'survive', as food is always available to us, it makes the need to be very careful less urgent. Clearly genetics and family influences are very important. I am a 'Baby Boomer from the late 1940's, and still clear my plate as instructed at the time! Nothing in the way of snacks, but big helpings of meat, fish and veg.

Nadia | 09/07/2007 15:23:00

I believe the problem with child obesity deffinatley starts at home. An obese child is more than likely to come from a background of large or obese parents or family members. It is up to parents, from the day the child starts on solids, to provide healthy food choices for them so they can get a taste of the good nutritious food from the offstart. The problem is parents eating rubbish and the children following the example of their parents. Allowing children to eat large portions of food and no discipline where meal times are concerened, allowing them to eat in between meals with crisps and sweets and sugary drinks all contributes to this fact. Another major cause is lack of excersise. Everyone is indoors watching tv, on the computer or playing video games. Children should be out in the open playing and getting a good amount of excersise on most days.

I am a bit mixed on media because yes the media advertises a lot of unhealthy food targeted at young children but it's the companies that decide to make these products for the children that should take the brunt of the blame. The media advertise what is there and is available to them. A lot of the food brand companies out there are just in it to make money. They don't really care about the health of the children so they won't make the best decisions where health is concerned. Parents can counteract this problem by demonstrating through the power of choice, to choose the healthier options for their children thereby decreasing the influence of these profit hungry companies.



Louise | 09/07/2007 15:56:00

I think it all boils down to the parents, if a parent is going to let a child eat whatever they desire to eat then no control is made over their diet. My child eats very healthy food but also has her treats aswell. She is a chocolate lover like myself but i also think it all down to your makeup, i have always had a very high metabalism and i think my child follows suit to me. I can eat whatever i want whenever i want. I dont understand parents when they do not cook for their children with healthy meals. I know quite alot of parents who think that giving their child a chocolate bar and a packet of crisps is the perfect evening meal, i think it is disgraceful. The media i dont think can be to blame for obesity it is down to the individual family to blame. I think it is absolutely disguisting to see a child with a huge stomach. Exercise thats what i say instead of letting them become couch potatoes.

Morgan Rees | 09/07/2007 16:12:00


In my opinion there is no one factor that produces child obesity, it is a combination of factors. For example - children sit and watch far more television than say 30 years ago - they spend far less time outside exercising than we did as kids - the trend for convenience food and fast food is another contributing factor. Also we as a nation are far more obese than we were a generation ago.



Madeline | 09/07/2007 16:40:00


Fat children almost always come from fat families. If the parents eat badly how can the children be expected to like healthy food. People want an easier life and see ready meals and fast food as a way of not having to work so hard in the home. I do not like cooking much but it is very easy to cook simple nutritious and additive free meals that the children will eat. My children do have the occasional fast food meal if we are out, but sometimes they refuse and opt for a sandwich instead. I do not stop sweets or fizzy drinks but they are treats not for everyday. Parents have forgotten how to say no to their children. My children are at schools that provide a school cooked lunch every day (healthy with no choice). They also have sport four days a week. Mine are the lucky ones there.

mother of 3 | 09/07/2007 17:36:00

The worst thing for children is the fact its there, until the government puts a ban on the stuff they will just get worse and worse (look at cigarettes, they finally putting a ban on smoking in public places so there is hope!!)


Emma Sutton | 09/07/2007 18:22:00

I believe that adverts have some influence on what children will eat but its the parents responsibility to buy the food not the childrens. I believe that children should eat a bit of everything in moderation , i always did and its never done me any harm.


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Shelley | 09/07/2007 18:49:00

I think there are far too many "nasty" additives in foods which certainly don't do our children any good. I believe healthy eating should start from weaning and continue on a daily basis throughout life. 3 healthy meals a day can be acheived very easily but alas many parents today have not been educated into how to cook healthy food.

Breakfast cereal with fresh fruit no added sugar and milk is extremely easy and nutritious.

packed lunch including salads, fruit, nuts, and chicken or cheese etc are very easily prepared and with the aid of todays cooling lunch bags keep fresh and chilled.

evening meal, could be a healthy stirfry with rice or noodles, or even griddled chicken/fish in sauce is very simple to prepare serve with vegetables either microwaved or steamed all made in around 30 mins or a casserole cooked in a slow cooker all day ready to serve when u get home from work. It just takes a little time to prepare either the night before or in the morning.

When i was at school we had domestic science, we was taught how to prepare and cook nutritiously balanced meals including how to make home made breads to full 3 course meals.

When my 3 older children did cooking at school they were taught how to make tinned soup more nutritious! I think the lack of knowledge of both cooking and nutrition has led to many obese children.

Also the lack of at least 1 " sit at the table " family meal a day has resulted in many children being given "convienient" tv meals, and the same sort of families who allow their kids to leave their meal then go and fill up on junk eg crisps and biscuits has lead not just to obesity but lack of discipline and manners too.

I understand many parents are working fulltime hours but this should not cost our kids their healthy diets. with todays cooking aids and gadgets a good nutritious meal can be prepared and made inside 30mins. These type of meals should be taught to our kids in school as well as being taught and expeirenced in the home.

I do think the lack of good old fashioned family values is very much a major part in child obesity.

ok rant over.


Mhairi Roberts | 09/07/2007 19:44:00


I have 3 girls none of whom are obese, who eat well and regularly. We do occasionally have a MacDonalds as a "treat" for them but I am responsible for the food in the cupboard, fridge and lunchbox so I am the most important factor in their diet. fruit is a dessert item and exotic fruit are a fun treat and all other food is cooked from scratch at a reasonable cost and without being time consuming. How long does it take to cook fresh pasta and whip up a sauce? No longer than it takes to heat chicken nuggets etc. in an oven. I also get the girls involved in the food preparation and cooking which reinforces that food and eating are a necessary and social funtion to be enjoyed.

geoff | 09/07/2007 20:19:00

although not all children are obese i feel the main factor in this is children today are faced with more choice and a lack of disipline . yes parents need to take more responsability but with more backing from the goverment this can be changed / i feel that we need to give more funding to the educational authority to make exercise/ sport/ more accessable in schools and less time spent sitting in class all day doing very little and then going home and sitting in front of the computor eating and drinking so parents can get some peace

Steve Giller | 09/07/2007 22:31:00


It is great to see the number of people here that agree that the parents should bear the majority of the responsibility for their children's weight.

As a working single Dad, I have two healthy girls, who prefer a cooked dinner to a McDonalds, and enjoy fruit as much as sweets as a snack. I'd say if I can do it, most people can. The idea that removing junk food ads will magically resize our children is ludicrous! It is up to the parents to educate, inform and, where necessary, enforce healthy eating. If your school is not providing healthy meals you can either lobby the governers or switch to sandwiches, and if adverts make your children ask for junk - you can always decline.

I would say, however, that with the ever-increasing range of exotic foods becoming available the advice on what is or isn't healthy is not keeping pace. Trying to get dietary advice from your local surgery is harder than piloting a helicopter blindfolded! With the increase in multi-GP practices we should have dieticians available as a matter of course - my surgery has 8 doctors, two nurses and about 6 receptionists/administrators - but no dietician, which is a deificiency that should be rectified.


Sarah Theobald | 10/07/2007 07:09:00

My daughter, who is now 12, went through a few years of being overweight - or so I thought! I took her to see our Dr because I was concerned and there was so much written in the press about child obesity but the Dr said that she was within a nomal weight range for her height. About a year ago, she shot up height wise and any excess fat just seemed to disappear so I tend to think that the condition is over dramatised.


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Mandy | 10/07/2007 10:43:00

My daughter is 2, and at her recent check I was told she is over average for her height and over average for her weight. At her age I'm not worried. She eats very well and eats a lot of different things. We do allow her to eat fast food occassionaly - I don't want to make an issue with it, and make her the odd one out. I don't think any particular food is bad, just how much you have. Now here's the thing that does worry me - I'm overweight bordering on obese, and I know every fat person makes excuses. My step mother was very abusive and envious of my very slender frame as a teenager, and would pratically force me to eat. She had a rule that you couldn't leave the table unless you ate everything on your plate, and she would constantly pile up my plate. When her sons couldn't finish their dinners, the leftovers were put on my plate and I was called the human dustbin and told I oculd eat whatever I wanted. I now have a very underactive thyroid, which doctors refuse to acknowledge, I do eat healthily and exercise regualrly, the weight is very gradualy coming off - about a 1pound a month. But my daughter is coming to an impressable age - I dread the day she asks why is mummy fat. I think that parents being overweight can cause eating disorders either over or under eating, and tyhat scares me. I could be the cause of my daughters weight problems no matter what I try to teach her.

sam | 10/07/2007 10:59:00


• How much of an influence do you think the online advertising of fast food has on children food choices?

i think it has a large influence as they see these things advertised and then want them next time you go shopping or if its for fast food they want it for tea that night.it is up to us to not let them have it all but if the advertisements were for better food and the food was made healthier we would not have to let them down so much and look like the baddies.


• What measures should parents take to ensure that children make healthy food choices?

they should first show a good example and eat healthy themselves and teach kids that its ok to have an odd treat but not to live on them.also to cook in healthier ways and show kids how to cook in the kitchen, then they are brought up thinking this is the norm and their taste buds deevelop to healthy tastes/foods rather that fried and deep fried.



Gweneth Overell | 10/07/2007 11:03:00


I'm confused I have 2 daughters, 1 is slim and one is overweight/obese. They have always been fed the same. they were both big babies. I think genes must come into play somewhere as i am obese and my husband is slim. In both our families the females seem to be overweight or even obese where the men are not.

Susan Mackie | 10/07/2007 11:05:00


I think there is some truth that families don't eat together as the norm, I'm fortunate that I have 3 children, so even when meal times were earlier in the evening, and they didn't always have adults eating with them, mealtimes were still a social occasion. Now we generally all eat together and there are 2 mealtime options - take it or leave it! My biggest concern for weight gain is 'fizzy drinks'. 1 can per day is apparently equivalent to 1 stone (?) per year!

Cath | 10/07/2007 11:13:00

I think that is up to parents to educate their children about healthy food. I don't think that any foods should be banned just eaten in moderation once in a while. Also you don't seem to see children playing out as much, I think due to computer games and tv. I know that parents are concerned for their childrens welfare but a few hours in the park for all the family will give the much needed exercise and also it bonds families together.

kaz | 10/07/2007 11:20:00


I have 5 children and each one of them enjoys junk food but i believe in moderation so if they want burger and chips then i make my own and add a salad that the children have helped to prepare. I also let the children grow there own vegetables in the garden so they get to eat there own homegrown produce and get some fresh area and exercise instead of sitting in front of the tv or games console


Lorraine Watts | 10/07/2007 11:23:00


I have two sons who are both very tall, broad and for want of a better word chunky!! But they would give anyone a run for their money. My eldest son plays rugby and cricket on a weekly basis, together with other sports and is doing a Sports Leadership qualification in his final year at school. My youngest son is 11 and he plays football and cricket every week also, they both do training every week and regularly swim, cycle in fact if there is activity out there to be done they will do it!! But they have been told by both peers and other children that they are fat!! Being big does not necessarily mean you are obese, you can be big and very fit! Have a look at some of the World's best rugby players not exactly small are they? They both have a good sensible diet because I cook for them, they very rarely have McDonalds so don't always judge a book by its cover !!!

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Plutonic Coast | 10/07/2007 11:44:00

I beleive that mothers can influence the eatng habits of their children. I don't think any food should be banned but they need to be limited. i am obese myself , this is mainly due to largealmost permanent use of prednisolone, steroids. I wish the medical profession had been hoset with me when I was younger. I kept telling them I was worried about the increases of weight I was experiencing and was not informed of thte side efffects, I began eating the wrong foods in attempts to stop the hunger. I thought I would be able to lose the weight once I felt better. Thankfully my children are good healthy weights. They eat well balenced diets. I treid to encourage them to eat healthy options but never banned foods. Crisps etc were limited and eaten as treats. They exercise, running walking etc. \as young children they joined clubs which encouraged activities where they could burn up their energy, eg swimming, volleyball etc. I do think advertising is more intense and directly targets children. Although fresh foods are better for children if you compare the price of fresh fruit to sausage rolls,crisps etc I ddon't think it is any cheaper. I would like to see fresh fruit a lot cheaper to encourage people to buy them and for children to have plenty available in the home.

Liz | 10/07/2007 11:46:00

I beleive one of the faults is food manufactors,by trying to make as much profit as they can. By using cheap atficial fillers. For those who rely on convienient food they just dont know what is in the food they are eating. So a good well balanced diet must be better. Which I fed my own children.My own are both of normal weight , I knew what I was feeding them had no extra additives.

Most children dont like school sports but do like to be able to run about while at home, as most new homes now very small garden, if any , where are they meant to run, we all know that they are no longer safe to leave the home on their own. So they sit in front of the pc or tv, which is not ideal. Goverment needs to address this by stop making builders building houses with no gardens, this would help !!

I am not sure what is the answer, apart from common sense.



elinor | 10/07/2007 12:05:00

Everyone here seems to be blaming the parents for their child's unhealthy diet but i know I am not alone in my problem with my son--I have always been interested in nutrition and am fully aware of what foods are healthy and unhealty. We eat very healthily-lots of fruit and veg and I cook all my meals from scratch.( My child has never been given a ready-meal in his life.)however we are not overstrict(sweets and junk food are not banned completely).My son however has always been a fussy eater and everytime I read an article aimed at mums with fussy eaters they wrongly assume we don't know what foods are healthy and that we are piling them up with chips! They give silly advice that "if you make the food attractive, the child will eat it eg try making carrot crudites" or" arrange your vegtables into a funny face on the plate" This makes me so angry as any child that eats fruit and vegetables just because they are arranged in a funny face, is NOT a fussy eater, they have just never been offered healthy food by their parents before. Yes some kids don't eat fruit and veg because their parents are ignorant about nutrition and have never offered them to their kids but don't assume all fussy eaters have such parents! My child will not touch any fruit and veg or tomato-based sauces despite the good example we set and despite being offered a large variety of them. I was always made to feel like a bad mum when the dinner ladies at school told me he would not eat any fruit and veg and gave me a look as if to suggest that I was an ignorant parent! Despite being a very fussy eater, my son is not overweight because I have watched his diet and kept his junk food intake low(eg given him rice and potato instead of chips). I now am having difficulties with this because he has started secondary school- unlike primary school, the parents cannot pay for their child's school dinners in advance-instead you have to give your child the money each day for their dinner.A few weeks into the first term, with my son coming home ravenous every day I got out of him that he and his mates did not like queing up all lunchtime only to find that when they got to the front of the queue,all the"good" things had run out and only "horrid" things ( eg veg-based) were left. So instead, they were spending their dinner money on sweetsand crisps on the way to school. I immediately stopped giving him money and put him on packed lunches instead. The packed lunches kept coming home uneaten and I found out that his friends were giving him a share of their sweets and crisps! At this rate he will be overweight in no time and it is obvious that his peer group at school are all eating unhealthily. I don't know the solution to this problem as the school can't be held to blame for not providing healthy food- it is just that a large proportion of the kids do not want to eat it or spend their lunchtime queing for it ( which is how it is done in all secondary schools). I just want to show all you people out their feeling smug because your children eat everything, that you can have a fussy-eater for a child no matter how hard you try as a parent. My next-door(vegetarian)neighbour has one child that eats everything that is put in front of him and one child that won't eat anything but bread and ham - so how can this be her bad example or ignorance?



Amanda | 10/07/2007 12:41:00

I believe it is the parents that need educating about balanced, nutritious and healthy food for their children and not the children themselves. Children learn by example and if their parents eat healthily and explain why certain foods should be moderated a child will recognise what is good to eat and what to avoid.

I think it's a nonsense to blame fast-food companies for childhood obesity...if parents buy from such places they cannot blame the companies. Also what is wrong with an occasional indulgence? Are we all so stupid as to not know what is healthy and good for our children? Do we need to be told what to avoid?

Modern living certainly doesn't help. Nobody walks anymore, more parents are working than ever before so everything is done as quickly as possible. This is certainly true of cooking. Never before have so many ready meals and pre-cooked foods been consumed. If we could just go back to basics our children would be far healthier and we as parents would be far happier!


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Christine | 10/07/2007 13:59:00

I am horrified by the term childhood obesity. It goes against everything we know about building up a child's self esteem and setting patterns for the future. More needs to be done to ascertain why some children have a tendency to get fatter than others. I have no doubt that diet and exercise play their part but why is it that some children eat an incredibly unhealthy diet and remain very thin and others seem to put on weight almost no matter what? What is the point in making that child feel that everything is their fault and that they are somehow of less value because they are fatter that others. By all means encourage a child to eat a healthy diet and take part in lots of active games and play, but I feel that the current trend of going on about childhood obeisity is actually dangerous in itself and soon we won't have to worry about how fat the children are because we will be too busy dealing with their depression and an increase in childhood suicide



Patricia | 10/07/2007 15:18:00

There were always children who were fatter than others and I feel the current obsession with weight is making for even more stress for the young. Most of the "fat" kids I went to school with in the early 60's are now slender, fit grandparents!

However, there are many extra-curricula activities laid on for young people these days and parents and teachers seem to think their job is done if they drive their children to one of these clubs, then pick them up again!

Children are not allowed out to play after school, even in rural areas and so the joys of building a "den" in the local wood, or searching for vole-holes along a stream bank are lost to them. An hour after shool is not enough activity for children to remain fit. They need to be constantly on the move, interested and stimulated.

Unfortunately, most children seem to be stuck in a room (on a beautiful day!) with a computer or games machine, talking on their mobile phone to the child next door.

We should not allow a tiny, tiny TINY risk of abduction to take away our children's childhood - they should be permitted to go further afield as they get older and more responsible, with a group of friends.

This would solve some other social problems caused by lack of social skills as well as help children keep fitter and more interested in life.


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Patricia | 10/07/2007 15:20:00

PS - McDonalds food as a TREAT! No, no! I used it a a punishment when they didn't come home at tea time!

"You'll have to have a grease-burger" seemed to do the trick!



Jackie | 10/07/2007 15:29:00

In recent years women have made a virtue out of not cooking. In fact they would gaze at TV cameras and giggle coyly, proud to say they were hopeless in the kitchen.

I held down a job as soon as the children were at Secondary school, but I always cooked from scratch and we always had a sit down together evening meal. I was too poor to buy convenience food. We were also too poor for a car and so walked everywhere. The only choice over food that my children could have was whether to eat it or not. Fortunately I am a brilliant cook, and there used to be butchers who would advise on cheaper cuts and how to cook them, fishmongers likewise.

I see obese and podgy children trailing their parents in supermarkets and you can tell by just looking that they are constipated as well, because the skin is a bad colour and they are listless and petulant. The trolleys are full of fizzy drinks and crisps and you just know that no-one takes any exercise.

Ignorance, laziness and a complete lack of discipline.



Linda | 10/07/2007 22:03:00

Some children with obesity suffer through no fault of there own, my daughter was bullied at school over a period of six years, through that she became a comfort eater, and had an eating disorder, when that happens a childs confidence has gone and it can take a long time to regain it. The more they gain weight the more they are bullied, So parents cannot be blamed for their child being obese all they can do is to help them over come it.



Karen | 11/07/2007 06:37:00

I believe it is parents responsibility at the end of the day to monitor what food their child is having. They should be teaching their children the healthy way of eating and living. I'm not a stay at home mum far from it i work 24hours a day and get little sleep but i still manage to cook meals and sit with my children at least one meal time a day. If a child is overweight it's because the parents have allowed that child to eat excessively and not been encouraged to exercise to keep healthy. So come on parents it's your job to teach your children these things!

Sarah | 11/07/2007 07:25:00


I have two children, one fat and one thin. They have the same parents.same home background, same availibility of food, same availibility of money. They are two years apart in age. The only difference between them is that one looks like my side of the family and the other looks like my husband's. In other words, one takes after a group of high metabolism 'burners' and the other doesn't. Why don't more people take genetic differences into account when talking about fat children? Yes, my fat child needs encouragement and help and a certain type of general diet, but we do not eat a bad one to start off with. The cruelty of society towards the fat is wicked. Actually, it is my thin child who is always eating - a real scavenger!

divinity5 | 11/07/2007 08:20:00


i was an obese child and now im an obese adult. food was not a factor in my weight and is not now. children these days do not have the space to play outside so they dont get enough exercise. there are too many computer games and low income families to allow children to get enough of the right food. the cost of so called healthy food and the family budget dont go together.

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eric dunning | 11/07/2007 10:34:00


einstiens theory of relativity explains that the greater the wt the greater the energy needed to move it. ie the metabolic rate increases with wt gain, so making it very hard to get off the tredmill of the more food you eat the more food you want.

Anne Dangerfield | 11/07/2007 10:38:00


This whole phenomenon starts before birth. In obese women, their babies have a poor start in life anyway. If the babies are then bottle fed it just goes downhill from there.

I was in an Asda in one of the poorer areas in my city, and was shocked at how unhealthy most of the children looked. Overweight, bad teeth, and usually accompanied by parents wheeling tolley loads of convenience foods - they had usually also given the child a fizzy drink or some kind of sweet to keep them quiet.

The supermarkets also stock their shelves differently - more microwave meals in poorer areas and more fresh produce in more affluent ones.

General ignorance of diet and how to eat healthily (and in most cases more cheaply) is a huge problem. Probable cause is more women working otside the home and losing the skills required to produce a good home made meal. Bring back home economics for all I say!

Sounds like a huge rant and blaming it all on women, however I think we all know how much influence a woman has on her family's diet and no amount of PCness will change that, sorry.

I don't know how we can make changes happen across the board, but I do know that there are people in about 2 generations out there right now who have no idea about balanced diets for children



jaylee | 11/07/2007 10:53:00

i do not think it as much of a probmel as the media are making out.i teach at a school and there are not that many obese kids,i think the blame lies with both parents and schools,there is not much focus on sports any more because of the national curriculum and at primary schools competitions are not encouraged any more.bring back the egg and spoon race!

rufusair | 11/07/2007 10:59:00

When young, my children ( 1F + 1 M) only ate at meal times with no snacks in between. They ate no sweets at all except on Saturday & Sunday when there were no limits. There was always a fruit bowl available to them at any time and the meals we gave them were properly home cooked meaks. They got plenty of exercise and didn't ever visit places like MacDonalds or other quick fry junk food outlets. Both I and my wife were fairly tall and slim and we always ate the same as the children. If they didn't like something they did not get a substitute which they liked better. As a result they are both now tall slim adults and my grandchildren are being brought up in roughly the same way. They too are fairly tall and slim. Long may it last. Obese children are usually a result of lazy parents who can't be bothered to look after their children properly. Very occasionally it is heredity but such children seem to be indulged far too much by their equally very obese parents. I feel sorry for them.

Mandy Dyson | 11/07/2007 11:16:00


You can look for as many contributing factors as you like but the simple fact is obese parents create obese children. It's a form of abuse & is no ones fault or responsibility other than the parents.

susan malcolm | 11/07/2007 11:18:00


I am a fat adult, there are many of us and we are fat for many reasons. But I hate to see fat children, I don't mean tubby children - but fat.

When we were young we went out to play, we wandered for miles in the woodland. We had no money so we didn't stop off for a McDonalds for a snack. We were active and having fun.

My mother was a good cook - mince and tatties, stew, soup etc so we always ate well, but we were also treated to fish and chips now and again. But we burned off the calories by taking exercise.

Children today have computers, games, TV and a wide selection of snack foods. They consume drinks filled with sugar and the snacks are usually high in fats.

There is no magic solution to this problem. I hated sports at school - but maybe the schools can find alternative sports or activities that would suit the children incapable of running around a track in the rain, or (like me) were a danger with a hockey stick.

What we mustn't do is make a child go on a 'diet' - just carefully omit some of the calorie laden foods and slowly increase the exercise.

 

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Molly | 11/07/2007 11:45:00


I was born in 1948, just as many sweet things were coming off ration after WWII. My mother positively encouraged me to eat sweets, chocolate and sugar, as these were treats which had been unavailable for years. I would be given bread and butter with white sugar spread on it, or a morning roll and butter with soft brown sugar. A regular mid-morning snack was an orange with three sugar cubes pressed into the middle of it (one sucked the juice through the sugar). Naturally, being given this kind of stuff led to childhood obesity.

My parents were intelligent and educated people, but there was little advice in those days about dietary matters. There would be absolutely no excuse today for parents feeding their children in that way.


Edith Yembra | 11/07/2007 12:48:00


I have 3 children of which 1 is fat but I have since stopped buying unnecessary snacks and any fatty foods to help my daughter cut down on her weight. I encourage her to go for a walk instead of sleeping all through the weekend after each meal. Although parents can watch what their children are eating, you can not honestly control what they eat at school or after school on their way home with friends. As most parents today are educated we can do a lot more to help children who are fat to understand the ramification of being fat and instil some discipline along the line.

DENISE | 11/07/2007 12:58:00

I was born in 1959 and from the age of about 7 began to gain weight quickly and excessively. When I look back on my own history and my struggle with obesity I feel quite sad. I remember the taunts and bullying both at school an outside of school. My mother was one of those women who believed a meal wasn't substantial if your plate wasn't over flowing and if you didn't eat every pick that was on your plate. By thirteen I weighed 13 stone and at this point my mother decided that it was all my own fault, I was greedy, and needed to diet. From 13 I was prescribed a pill called TENUATE DOSPAN by my GP. I was really to young to understand what it was, but I do remember being told it was an appetite supressant. While my peers had fun and gorged on sweets and chips and things, I would start the day with half a grapefruit, which made me wretch, I was made to come home for lunch, in case I ate something I shouldn't and lunch would be 2 cream crackers and a banana, preceeded by what was called and AYD, this was a slimming aid in the form of a toffee, tea time I would come home to a small piece of steamed fish, or 3 LIMMITS SAVOURY BISCUITS, the 3 biscuits was Limmits recomended amount for a meal. I was allowed nothing more that day. Yes I lost weight, and yes it was under the GP, but my life was so miserable. After 2-3 years of the tablets I was 7stone 7pounds and GP said ne more were required. That was it. Mam went back to cooking me hugh meals and within a year I was back at the GP, and the whole cycle started again. Now 47 my life has been a long journey of Yo-yo dieting, some of this my fault for being weak where food is concerned and some of it my mothers fault for feeding me man size meals and forcing me to eat every morsel,or be sent to my room and have it warmed up for my next meal. I have had 3 children, my daughter is a carbon copy of me as I am of my mother, by this I mean we are all the same height, same shape, and gain weight at the drop of a hat. I have a sister and brother who are copies of my father, tall and slim. My own 2 boys are taller and slim like their father. I am compelled to question the hereditry aspect because in all sincerity I should not be the size and weight that I am now. I eat healthier and well within a 1200 calorie in take each day. I walk every where and have a 40 hour a week shop floor job with eight hour shifts and constantly on the move, I still gain weight. I had half of my thyroid removed some years ago due to a cyst or tumour and have never taken any medication for a thyroid disorder dispite the fact I show several of the symptoms of Under activity which are some times quite severe and depressing. My GP is like many GPS and is unable to see past her fat glasses. I feel terribly let down.



Contented adult | 11/07/2007 13:27:00

I feel that modern living does have an affect on peoples weight in general because families are not encouraged to do outdoor activities. Everything is conveniently located so you don't have to walk far to get what you want. Supermarkets are designed for people with cars who do a big weekly/monthly shop which means there is no daily trip to the shops on foot to get the fresh produce for that days evening meal. Also the fact that fast food is so readily available and has become the norm as far as planning family meals. When I was young a chippy tea was a treat which you had occassionally, all other meals were healthy home cooked versions. You can't beat your mums cooking.

Children need to be coaxed outside to play, but first we need to ensure that it is a safe environment for them. Todays society is lacking in basic respect for other people and their property. In the past when you dared give cheek to an adult they would chase after you so at least you got some exercise running away from them. Nowadays the kids just stand their ground and backchat. We need to restore discipline which will lead to children showing an interest in themselves, their health and their appearance.


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Donna Evans | 11/07/2007 13:36:00

My children age 4 and 8 are very aware of what they eat. they both understand the 5 a day rule and in our house find it very easy to stick to. Thay are allowed some 'fast food' as a treat but they know that it is not very often. As a parent i am overweight and put on my weight in my 20's. i therefore do not want my children to follow suit - My parents controlled what we had and if anything I believe that people find portion control hard to control and that is where part of the problem lies. Having both parents having to work also puts the child in a risk cat. as from experience from friends it is normally quick and easy junk teas that win when the parents have so little time.

Advertising fast food chains and so called healthy soft drinks should not be allowed during childrens programms. We all know who the culprits are!



Donna Evans | 11/07/2007 13:36:00

My children age 4 and 8 are very aware of what they eat. they both understand the 5 a day rule and in our house find it very easy to stick to. Thay are allowed some 'fast food' as a treat but they know that it is not very often. As a parent i am overweight and put on my weight in my 20's. i therefore do not want my children to follow suit - My parents controlled what we had and if anything I believe that people find portion control hard to control and that is where part of the problem lies. Having both parents having to work also puts the child in a risk cat. as from experience from friends it is normally quick and easy junk teas that win when the parents have so little time.

Advertising fast food chains and so called healthy soft drinks should not be allowed during childrens programms. We all know who the culprits are!



John Menzies | 11/07/2007 14:02:00


Education is the most important factor and this has to be in the school at home and supported by the media. What is crass stupidity is the government pointing the finger solely at parents and threatening them with child abuse. Retarded thinking. Even if a child is fat growing up in a loving home is more important. The whole thing is red herring anyway and just another target for the state to exercise control and reduce the freedom of the individual. When it comes to pensions we are told we are all going to live longer and are going to have to work longer to help support us into a long old age. Make your mind up. Are we eating our way to early graves or going to live longer. You cannot have it both ways and remain credible.

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Sue Seymour | 11/07/2007 14:10:00

I think it is time that people remembered that children are not born craving for sweet, fatty unhealthy foods, it is time that parents remembered that they are are solely responsible for what goes into their childs mouth from the first spoonful of solid food that the chid has. Eating habits need to be started from day one, that very first spoonful of food that is given will set the eating trend of a child, if you teach a child to "like" sweet, fatty foods then as they get older that is what they are going to eat. Could I please also point out that I am a mum of two now grown up children who eat varied diets that does include the odd burger and chips but consists mainly of fresh fruit, vegetables and homemade meals. The answer to childhood obesity is simple, start with the right foods, teach children about food (after all we are quick enough to learn them to read and write etc) and learn them that cooking from scratch is fun!!!



Deborah M | 11/07/2007 15:05:00


I have read many postings and i think its very easy to blame the parents or the govenment or school dinners or this and that, but in fact its not as easy as all that. The problem is its a combination of factors that start with a major lack of the right kind of education. I totally agree fast food has started the obesity epedemic all over the world where fast goes the population grows. However some where in the last 30 years we have stopped cooking and eating food that does not come in a packet.

Govenment cut backs have taking the cooks out of school kitchens and replaced them with microwaves and people that can reheat things. Thankfull this is slowly being reversed but this process should be speeded up considerably. When i was a child we could have a salad the menu was set you had to have a meat, a carb and a veg. there was no child allowed to have pasta, chips and bread for there lunch which i have seen with my own eyes at my local school and the dinner lady that served that said its there choice. This is why my children have a packed lunch becuase the school dinners are not only discusting, they are never what they are suposed to be and the people serving them do not care if the child is getting a balanced meal or not. This is probably not true for all school but here where i live it is the case.

Then we have food manufacturers sticking loads of chemical additives to preserve, enhasnce and flavour our food, We are not made of chemicals and these things cause untold damage to our bodies. There are to many carbohydrate sweet and salty snacks on the market and if i had my way i would ban the lot I see kids in the morning buying there packet lunch and its full of these things they have zero nutritional value and society wonder why these kids are over weight.

As for parents they do play their part but im appalled with the media and goverment with the way they are singling out parents of obese children and having talkes about whether its abuse or not. There is not one reason why these children are obese its quite obvious its a combination of things

Lack of education in nutrition and cooking

media advertising of junk, fast food, sweets and chocolate, and convienced stuff, I think all food but healthy food adverts should be banned and food companies should be fined if they are found to have artifical stuff in there products. I think there should be a way fresh veg and fruit can be made cheeper.

School dinners should be controlled and balanced without the rubish and processed stuff,

I think the govenment should launch an advertising compagne to educate the public in what exactly a healthy diet is and how they can balance there diet and give tips to parents that want to more away from the junk and replace it with the good stuff.



Baden | 11/07/2007 15:19:00

I have two teenage children well within normal BMI range. They go to a High school where the number of overweight children are few and apparently well below the national average. However we do need to keep control of the "sugar" factor, particularly when one male friend, who is heavy and slightly obese, ia around. The trips to the local shops to buy large amounts of chocolate, sweets and soft drinks suddenly become the main activity of the day! His parents are often out and he is encouraged to buy take aways and sweet products in place of family meals.

Ros | 11/07/2007 15:36:00

Healthy foods cost more. Parents on a tight budget will always buy the chips, crisps, chicken nuggets rubbish. I personally feel that supermarkets should offer healthy foods at much lower costs enabling people to buy it. On the other hand though when my son first started school he ate wholemeal bread, water not juice, carrots, cucumber and fruit for lunch, but within six weeks he wanted juice, left crusts, then changed to white bread - now buy best of both - stopped eating the vegetables I gave him! Peer pressure has alot to do with it, but I suppose I should have persisted with the healthier stuff. He is, however, not overweight as meals at home are healthy most of the time. What worries me more than obesity though is the chemicals that go in our childrens' foods - this is a timebomb waiting to happen!! Obesity we can work on by increasing their exercise and helping serve better foods, but chemicals what can we do about that?

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deb | 11/07/2007 17:41:00

i believe that children will learn from the main care giver. however there is too much advertising that influences them and Mcdonalds and the like do not really encourage healthy eating even though it is a 'childrens' restaurant. We adults should be the role models to encourage healthy eating. Sports are also an important factor in keeping healthy.

tara whiting | 11/07/2007 17:48:00

to be honest with you all but half the reasons why we have child obisity is down to the parents . most parents drive to school or work , ok some of them live too far to walk or bike but the other parents are just too lazy , im a mum of 3 children 11 years , 8 years and a 6 year old . i also work part time as a playschool teacher . i walk my daughter to school every day , my other children walk with there friends or bike . and when i drop her off i then bike to work . also my children do have a playstation but i encourage them to go and play outside , with ther friends my eldest use to play in the local football team and he knows, and my other children knows what healthy food is i sometimes cook convenience foods but i will still give them a proper cooked family meal at tea time . and just to make sure that eat friut and veg at least once maybe twice a day . also we love pasta and rice also a lot of sea food . squid etc. which some poeple wont offer that to there child . im lucky my children will try lots of different types of food . they say how do we know if we like it or not untill you have tried it . we used to have an allotment but unfortunatly we had to stop it but the kids saw what things looked like before it grew so when they planted something they got a lot out of the result at the end .

cath | 11/07/2007 19:38:00


My boys weighed between 7 lb 14 7lb 12 and 9 lb at birth, over the next 2 years they went way over their percantile weight and I had to dilute the milk they drank etc . I didnt put them on diets but as they grew up they knew that they could have unlimited ammounts of bread and fruit, but anything else was a controlled snack between 3 healthy meals. The 2 older ones were very active and slimmed down around 7/8 but the youngest and heaviest at birth was sedentary by nature and I was concerned about his weight although he could only ever be called chubby. All 3 are now skinny as rakes at 25,21 and 18. So my vote is for genes and example and few "ready meals" except chicken nuggets !!

Judith | 11/07/2007 20:49:00

Children today are allowed to eat what they want instead of eating what they are given. Too much letting them have their own way. My grandchildren eat what they are given when at my house with no argument but at home, their parents tend to be a bit soft and pander to them. Most of the school meals are fast food filled with additives and preservatives, so is it little wonder that kids today have so many illnesses and get fat ? Diet drinks are lethal, in fact anything with artificial sweeteners are carcogenics and give an artificial high which encourages kids to have more, very much like heroin or cocaine. My children and grandchildren rarely have anything that has artificial sweeteners or hydrogenated fats in it, and they are all normal sizes. Not too big and not too small for their ages. As for exercise well my grandchildren can rarely play out as the estate we all live on is overrun by children and youths causing trouble. This country has gone to the dogs ever since Thatcher brought the "I'm alright Jack" attitude into our society. Now kids rule, you cant tell them off, or make them exercise or stop them playing on consoles or even stop them drinking or smoking, so you cant stop fat kids from eating more crap and getting fatter.Until society gives the ruling back to parents, it will never get better. The future is FAT.



maggie | 11/07/2007 21:25:00

I agree with many of you. The parents of many obese children are obese themselves and so become the role models for their kids. When eating in restaurants such as pub carverys it is incredible to see the amount of food each member of an obese family puts on their plate. one chap had 15 roast potatoes alone!!! they need to educate their stomachs to receive less food. excercise or lack of it is also a big factor, come home from school, eat and then play on x box, ps2 etc. Even if the schools try and put on after school clubs unless supported by the parents the kids will not attend and most parents just can not be bothered.

jacqueline | 11/07/2007 23:22:00


you have to eat healthily yourself to encourage your kids to do the same, they will try new things if you do, i hide veg in sauces and make fruit smoothies, you do not have to buy fresh fruit and veg i buy frozen as well for convenience, which saves on visits to the shops especially when working. i feel it is important for kids to run around and use up their energy if you dont have a garden there is always the park, also i live beside a school and the amount of parents who take the car instead of a five minute walk is atrocious, kids need exercise

Lyn | 12/07/2007 09:44:00

Childhood obesity is due to diet and exercise in the majority of cases. Children do not exercise or play out like they used to, and sit around with the television and their consoles. They also eat a lot of processed and high fat food because it is cheap and convenient for parents to prepare.

Basically they eat too many calories and don't burn them off.


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K8 | 12/07/2007 10:13:00

As a parent to children with very sweet teeth, i have found that saying "No", doesnt harm our children, and encourages them to question your motives and then to influence their when they have a choice and we have less influence.

Eating sweets before meals, and every day on the way home from school, creates a pattern which can continue on and on.

We as a family love chocolate, but reserve it as a treat rather than the norm.


tampi | 12/07/2007 10:30:00

yes, i would say that food adverts have not helped kids in their food choices(though they are definitely trying to change their advert content,making it more healthy) and peer pressure too. kids go either to school or out with friends and want to eat together or what their friends are eating, stop eating a healthy(less fat, less sugar or salt) type of food because a friend made a bad comment about it or the friend dislikes it all together.

Tia | 12/07/2007 10:35:00

I work in childcare ages 2 through to 11 and also have my own children, and I haven't seen the proportion of obesity that is reported. I have bigger concerns with the prssure to be thin when you have a four year old saying they dont like their tummy because its not flat! I would like to see nutrition becoming part of the syllabus for very young children (we promote healthy eating at our setting), and maybe parents could join in these lessons.

Denise | 12/07/2007 10:47:00

It's difficult to say exactly what contributes to obesity in children, though generally I would put it down to the fact that children learn by example and if they see parents oveating all the wrong foods and being inactive, that's how they will become. They won't know any different. Being a full time working single mum I don't have a lot of free time or money but I still prepare our meals using steamed fresh or frozen veg, rice, pasta, fish or Quorn (my 6 year old daughter says it's wrong to eat animals!). We rearely eat chips, she doesn't like them, preferring slices of baked potato instead. She also prefers playing outside with her friends, riding her bike, skipping, going swimming or to dance classes to watching TV and loves going to the park to feed the ducks and chase pigeons and squirrels or play ball. She doesn't have a computer or playstation. Sweets, crisps, biscuits etc are not banned, but are reserved for treats. At school, only plain water is allowed at mealtime, sweets/chocolate are banned from packed lunches as are cakes and chocolate spread or jam sarnies are a definite no no. They recently held a walk/cycle to school for a week event, and PE and sports are regular activities. We certainly don't live in an affluent part of London either, many are low income families but as yet I have not seen any obesse kids at the school.



Debbie | 12/07/2007 11:17:00

I was at a single sex secondary school between 1968 & 1975. We had cookery lessons in our third year, and then carried it on if we chose it for O level. My daughter is just finishing her third year of co-educational secondary school. She has had 3 lots of half a term of food technology. Was the name changed because boys wouldn't tolerate cookery lessons? I think it's a real shame because cooking is something that happens in the home whereas technology conjures up images of laboratories, machines and factories. In other words it normalises eating processed food, which isn't as healthy as eating fresh food as it generally has high quantities of fat, salt and sugar (they have to make poor quality ingredients taste of something).



Ann | 12/07/2007 12:29:00

I have four children, all now teenagers.Two boys two girls. Both girls when they were about 9 carried more weight than the boys ever did despite the same meals and levels of activity. However puberty and the growth spurt that came with it has seen them develope into slim and fit healthy young women. I do think that we have to recognise that some variation in weight is gender and developement related. As far as children young people's activity levels are concerned we live in a rural aea with no public transport after 18.00 hrs. My children have to walk to do other things( visit friends etc) I always encouraged this, however in 2004 while my eldest son was walking to visit a friend a he was in collision with the vehicle of a speeding driver and was killed. We need to ensure that whatever we encourage our children to do they are safe and that the law is enforced to the enth degree to create a safe environment in which that activity takes place.


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AA | 12/07/2007 13:32:00

I agree with Jo and other similar posts.

Everything in moderation, as long as you stick to the basic natural ingredients and forget about artificial sweetners, colourings and flavours. The market place is flooded with chemicals in our food, so parents should go back to basics and teach their children from a young age to Eat Food in stead of Chemicals, to stop sitting in front of TV's/Games and get out get some fresh air and let the muscles work a bit.

Parents seem to follow the main stream of media influence and by that creating problems for their soon to be teens. Parents of young children should never give up on introducing new fresh tastes to their young ones. Find a way of preparing food that is tasty and acceptable for young tastebuds.

Todlers should not know about salt intake, sugar intake, fat intake! If they are taught to eat properly, enjoy food but not over indulge, a good healthy tasty meal will always win.

It is still up to the parents in any culture and society to protect their children, and that also include what they eat and drink.



berni | 12/07/2007 16:15:00

I see several children in my sons class of 10 year olds who I would regard as obese - 2 morbidly obese ! One girl who is very overweight also has a brother who is only 8 and also morbidly obese - as her parents are ! Her parents are responsible and need to take charge of the situation now . I class this as child neglect as much as undernorishment !

I think there are many more overweight children at primary school now than there were 30 years ago when I was there. Also children do not walk to school , do less exercise at school and spend most of their free time indoors watching tv or playing video games.

food high in fat, salt and additives are cheaper than fresh meat , fruit and vegetables - please make health food cheape

 



Moira | 12/07/2007 19:03:00

In this part of Lincolnshire there are still no school meals in Primary Schools which means day after day children are sent to school with a packed lunch. Peer pressure then takes over as children want to have the same types of foods as their friends. The other contributing factor seems to be that children don't play out like they used to. Hours and hours are spent in the house on one type of game console or another. If children were out there burning up the calories with exercise they wouldn't be obese. Finally, I do believe that there is a genetic predisposition towards some children putting on weight. I have two boys one who is very thin and eats when he is hungry and stops when he is full and the other who although not obese needs to be more closely monitored as he is constantly hungry, has an appetite as big as and adults and could very easily slip into the obese category.



fudgeysue | 12/07/2007 22:01:00

As the mother of an obese 13 year old who has been through numerous doctors, specialists, dieticians etc since she was 3 and started gaining weight, l am afraid l get very cross with people who say obesity is down to the parent. The people who are writing this are obviously lucky enough to have slim children!!!! I am not overweight, we have always eaten healthily, never have crisps , biscuits or chocolate in the house. It is very upsetting to feel that it is felt to be your fault that your child is large when you have tried everything to remedy it. Unfortunately it is a vicious circle and after a while because the child is large, they will start eating more. I also get cross when 'well meaning' people think your child must want more to eat etc just because they are large and don't believe them when they say they have had enough.

jan | 13/07/2007 00:28:00

Parents should lead by example, by eating healthy balanced meals themselves, and providing the same for their children. Eating all meals together at the dining table, whenever possible, not in front of the TV. Basically a return to what are seen as old fashioned habits. When it comes to pester power, just say NO. It's hard, but it works. Treat foods(chips,burgers etc), once a week, with portion control.

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APHRODITE | 13/07/2007 01:10:00

I certainly think that the level of obese chilren has sky-rocketed since I was a child. It was really quite rare to see a fat child then; now fat children are commomplace. People seem to be more poorly educated about the contents of the 'food' they & their children are consuming. Aspartame litters the ingredients lists of most, so-called, own brand healthy living lines. How the Hell anyone can call that vile neurotoxin 'healthy living' is beyond me. I think everyone needs to get back to basics. Vegetables, a modicum of meat & whole grains / pulses (all organic of course). A lot of obesity problems stem from the build up of toxins in the body, created by pesticides, artificial additives, etc.

People look at me when I stand in the aisle of a shop, laughing at the ingredients list of one product or another. The sad thing is, although I am quite well educated about food intake, my son continues to demand crap on his plate, even though I explain to him the folly of drinking blue pop & eating economy hot dogs. He knows all the cons (& is an avid Gillian McKeith watcher) yet still chooses to choose the diabolical alternative to nutritious fodder.

Many people comment on the high incidence of cancers in our society nowadays, blaming pylons, nuclear power stations, fillings, computers, etc. Yes - all well & good, they could very well have a valid point. But t

hese things are nothing compared to the carcinogenic effects of a substandard diet.

On a finishing note, it mentions the BMI scale at the top of this page, as a valid way of measuring obesity. Surely, the medical profession & all concerned with dietary habits must by now know that this scale is unreliable in the extreme. It is no indicator of body fat content. A lot of people have a high muscle content, which weighs substantially more than blubber. According to all the BMI, etc. charts, I am clinically obese. I am 42 yrs old, have a muscle content of over 40% & a body fat level of 19%. My brother was refused an operation, as he is along the same lines. I really feel it's time we stopped living in the dark ages, as far as our bodies are concerned; when will we wake up & realise, the absolute miracle we have been granted in the shape of our bodily machine. I would no sooner drink a tin of blue pop, than stick an HIV infected needle in my eye.

I don't think any person has a God given right to judge another, but, on the other hand, we must preserve this wonderful evolution, that is us. Rise up against the huge companies who tell us 'healthy living', 'good for you', etc. & tell them 'NO'. Our children deserve to be presented with a healthy alternative & an educated choice when it comes to servicing & fuelling their own mini-miracle.

I thank you for listening.

Aphrodite -x-



Louise | 13/07/2007 09:50:00

I think half of the problem these days is dare I say it parenting. I am a mother to three children and I can see how lifestyles have changed to a point where being a parent is more highly criticised and a lot more difficult. Before there was no television and a mother spent all her time purely focused on husband and children. Now life is so busy with so many commitments, it is hard to match previous ways of living, hence the issues such as childhood obesity come about.

I will readily put my hands up and say when I cook in the evening my three children get one hour of television, but they are not in front of it all of the time and we lead a very active lifestyle. Lunches are bought out, and as recent research has shown, lunches not made at home can be far unhealthier- even when you think you getting the healthy options!

Not forgetting that on some occassions in between school activities and trips out with youngest in tow, to ensure a consistent routine with bedtimes, so as not to disrupt school runs in the morning, sometimes a full home cooked meal is impossible in the time left, hence a quick takeaway, or sausage and chips or something or same consequence.

Childhood obesity is becoming more obvious as children are less active, and less cared for. Allowed to do as they please and run about for themselves with far too much pocket money. Wasn't it recent polls said that pocket money had risen to @£10 per week and that most of this went on sweets, and that wasn't counting the school dinner monies for school during the week.

We as parents need to take more responsibility and I know some will shout at me for this post, and those that do are probably doing it in a way considered the right way and getting a good balance of healthy living including food and exercise - letting children be children run about and explore not sit infront of the playstation all day.


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Richard | 13/07/2007 20:59:00

We live in a world where children are influenced by so many factors, far more than when we were kids. Parents have a massive responsibility to encourage healthy eating and not to cop out on fast foods. Ofcourse, there are many pressures on parents too, not least the need for two income families.

Obesity is the other end of the scale from other equally worrying eating disorders such as bulimia and anorexia and any approach to the subject in an intensely peer pressure driven environment must be carefully measured. Common sense is the order of the day, the odd treat such as MacDonalds or Burger King will not ruin your child's diet. Variety is the spice of life and introducing your child to eat different foods must be beneficial. My daughter first ate out in non English restaurants when she was three and she has always had a wide range of likes, despite the inevitable dislikes.

I have never let my daughter off with not trying something at least once and as they grow older, their preferences alter. Replacing sweets and biscuits with fresh fruit and healthier options is a must. My daughter likes more raw vegetables than cooked ones! Us adults have to lead by example and the importance of the family eating together cannot be ignored.

I believe that children need to learn how to prepare their own food at an early age - as safe as they can participate guided by either mum or dad. The more they know about what they eat the greater interest they have in their own health.

Although school has a role to play in food education and healthy eating - not least through good quality, nutritionally balanced school meals - parents must take the lead at home. With eating behaviour and discipline alike, the buck stops with the people who brought them into the world.



Sooty | 14/07/2007 02:27:00


I had two children (both are grown up now). One was overweight, the other one wasn't. Both my husband and myself were of average weight. I could never really understand why the eldest one was obese. We all ate the same food and had similar apetites.

Today, the eldest child is till obese and the youngest one isn't.

I would add that there wasn't as much publicity about healthy eating then as there is now. Cooking has never been one of my favourite pastimes - just a necessary evil.

In school, we were always given a choice of what to make - I think I made Lemon Meringue Pie every week for a year (the packet type) and the teacher never even noticed. I didn't pick up many tips at home because my mother wasn't a good cook either.

Today, I am a bit more health conscious, although I still can't cook. My daughter is a vegetarian and loves cooking.


kaz | 14/07/2007 03:27:00

I have 2 kids who are both very slim. I come from a family who were mostly very large. I breastfed my older son for 8 months, and my younger son for 14 months. I think this gave them the best start, dietwise. My older son had nearly all homemade food, liquidised, then minced. He had no sweets or chocolate until nearly one year old, when mother-in-law stuck her nose in, and gave him these things. Little son had a bit more baby food, as I didn't have as much time, but this was not too terrible as I breastfed him for so much longer. They are now 14 and 12, and although they do eat some junk, they also eat fruit and veg, and all meals at home are eaten as a family, even if we have different things

kerry | 14/07/2007 20:27:00

both me and my partners son are over weight we have recently started a new healthy eating plan and begun swimming at least twice a week which is helping loads it is difficult educating a child to healthy eating because they feel as though they are missing out i no this from personal experience. part time parents to my experience dont help as they are trying to compensate for not being there by filling them with junk food ie mcdonalds thinking that this will somehow fill the void that they have left but in our house hold all it has left is an unhappy unhealty 12 yr old.

Toni | 14/07/2007 23:19:00

I have three children, none of them at al overweight, I try to give them healthy meals but this is not always possible for me as I have to wotk full time. My middle child ( a 16 yr old boy) does not eat many vegetables, only sweet corn, broccoli and raw carrots, he is very thin. I do feel that a big reason why thre seem to be more obese kids now is because of lack of exercise. When I was at school we had PE three times a week and we were allowed to play out with our friends, we also had a decent sized back garden in which we spent alot of time playing. My youngest child is only four, I will not let her play outside as I think it is too dangerous for her. I have no garden for her to play in as I live in a very small flat, I try to take her t the park as often as I can and as I don't drive we have to walk to and from most places. I feel that this helps a lot. I think that if there was more physical activity at school it would result in less obese children.

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Karen McCleary | 15/07/2007 17:59:00

Balance is key. An extreme behaviour or action will have consequences.

Parents should assume responsibility for their children. Schools and government can only 'help'. After all, a child only sees a teacher or a health professional for a very small percentage of their life. Hopefully they will spend many years with their parents.

Achieving a happy and healthy balance is often difficult but it is worth trying at all times.



L Boaler | 15/07/2007 22:13:00

I know that my son and my niece and nephew have never been heavy. I personally think that given the right environment to grow up in, limited access to video games/t.v and p.c's all contributes to a lazy attitude. However on average children are not able to play out as much as i did as a child.

I do think that schools should encourage more active games and stop being afraid of competiveness or social standing or race or religion!

The parents/schools and society should all work together to give our children the chance to have an active, healthy lifestyle and stop the rot. Fast food and soft drink adverts should be shown after the watershed. The chocolate cereal adverts and sweet adverts must be some of the worse. My son is only allowed limited sweet stuff and accepts that - although not always happily.



hayley | 16/07/2007 09:41:00


my youngest eats for england but is very active so burns it off at her 4 year check up recently i was told she is under weight and too short for her age, but when my 5 year old was having her check last year i was

Simon Phillips | 16/07/2007 10:48:00

I was a fat child, and am a fat adult. I feel strongly that my attitudes to food and eating were and are influenced by my parents and THEIR experiences.

My mother grew up in the 1920's and 30's, her father was out of work for the majority of that time and food was scarce. One of my mothers enduring memories of childhood are the threat of the workhouse, Daily Mail boots and being so malnourished she had free school meals (a rare and unusual occurence then)

My father became an orphan aged 12. Up to that point he was well fed, well clothed and happy. After that he starved throughout his teenage years until he joined the RAF in 1943. Captured in Burma, he was then a Jap POW.

Both of my parents vowed never to feel hungry again, and that under no circumstances would their children feel the hunger they did.

It was a source of pride for my parents that, aged 5, I could eat an adult portion of food. So not only was food a reward, I was praised for eating obviously too much. I was ashamed of my body aged 5 (and still am) but food (and in quantity) is still something that comforts me.

In a nation where food, both good and bad, is easily available; cooking from scratch is seen as inconvenient; sweets etc. are seen as a way of quitening apparently inconvenient children; junk food is portrayed not as a treat but an essential mainstay of family life, "fat kids" are on a hiding to nothing.

Some solutions?

Education: a "fat tax" on the unhealthiest of foodswhich would provide funding of specialist PE teachers, adn each school day having at least 30 minutes of such activity; home-economics being re-introduced for EVERY child so that they can not only learn to cook, enjoy cooking, but can create a varied and healthy diet for themselves.Proper funding and promotion of grass roots level sports for children and adults.

Fiscal & regulatory: As mentioned above, a "fat tax" based upon the percentage 100g of a products content of all fats. As sugar is another main contributor, a sugar tax on the same principle. The banning of the use of hydrogenated or "trans-fats" in all foods. The reveue from these to fund the measures mentioned above.

 



Richard Evans | 16/07/2007 13:23:00

I honestly think parents are sometimes too hard on themselves when it is not necessary. There are so many reasons why children may be overweight and sometimes it is a combination of factors which are responsible.

The gene factor needs to be taken into account in a lot of instances. This is not meant to be an excuse but explains the phenomenon of why some children are simply naturally overweight and conversly underweight.

There are of course numerous instances when children are over-fed or fed an inappropriate diet; it is in these instances that parents need to sit up and give account for what they are doing to their children.

Advertising I believe only has a minimal effect on children and seeks to increase the pester power but then simply taking children to the supermarket would then be a risk to their health given the volume of subliminal messages they receive whilst walking the isles.

It is important that all parents take their individual cases into account; seek the root cause and deal with it either through professional help or through developing better regimes of eating habits, nutrition, exercise etc. Not for a moment should we assume that if a child is overweight it's because they are over-fed or are prone to poor parenting. Each case has to be taken on merit.



Ivan Cohen | 16/07/2007 15:30:00


I am 52 years of age and am late-onset insulin-dependent diabetic. Despite having been active in sports my whole life, I am now considerably overweight (at least 2 stone). My young children (9 and 7), on the other hand, remain slim and my wife and I are vigilant about their food intake and ensure they lead relatively active lives. They do not watch a great deal of television, nor spend much time at computer terminals. This is not something we force on them, rather it is something we have been training them for all of their lives. And this is only partly related to concerns that they could be predisposed to diabetes in later life.

Unfortunately, it is all too easy nowadays to blame someone else. But the key to dealing with childhood obesity starts with the role of parents: setting the right kind of example, and encouraging activities and healthy diets. More fruit and vegetables is key. More sports and regular play with other kids helps. Those parents who blame advertising need to take a look at their own culpability, and learn to say "no" to their kids from time to time. Moderation in ALL things is a good philosophy. Pester power only works on weak parents who are unwilling to play the role of the adult in the relationship.


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Erica | 16/07/2007 17:52:00


Labels, everything these days has to have a label, is it not enough that are children can't be children anymore, There are no family values anymore, mum & dad are at work and the children are raised by childminders, no one fault just society as it is, I decided to raise my own children to be responsible for their up bringing, I feel i am doing the right think, they do not excessively eat "rubbish" but they are allowed to live a little, being a larger person has always made me wary and I try to govern what they eat sensibly, Ban fast food, go back to eating round a dinner table and chatting playing board games and enjoying your children before they are too old.............



P. Lowe | 17/07/2007 07:54:00


Thankfully my children had no problems with obesity and I think genetic factors played an important role because as a family and I can trace mine back four generations, we are all basically slim.

Yes, bad feeding habits will affect those predisposed to weight gain and since cookery lesson were abandoned in schools, many parents haven't a clue how to cook or what to cook!



Lucy | 17/07/2007 16:52:00


I think the problem with obese children can not be tied to just one factor. There are many different reasons why a child maybe overweight. I have to say though adertising and fast food companies are getting better at promoting the heathier options but at the end of the day it is down to the parents. I am a mother of 2 and as all parents do, I buy the weekly shopping and choose what they eat, not them! My children do have biscuits and crisp...occasionally sweets & chocolate. We do tend to have fast food at weekends...but both my children are a normal weight, because we limit how much unheatly food they eat. Any child given a free range on what they want to eat is obviously going to choose sweets and chocolate! Parents have to be strict and not let child dictate to them. i do have the problem where I have one child who will eat anything and the other will only eat about 5 different foods!! Luckily the foods she does eat are fruit, veg, dairy and meat so covers abit of everything.

I do understand that some children's obesity is down to medical reasons but I do believe that 90% of child obesity it down to diet alone and can easily be changed.



Chris Rawden | 17/07/2007 20:04:00

I voted for family issues as a reason for obesity (as did nearly half who voted) and I'd like to link that to what Julie Brannan said. We live in a village with a reasonably sized school, and I'd say that a lot of the people here are fairly affluent. The kids at the school seem to me to be normal in terms of weight etc., and generally look healthy & happy. Where I work is close to a less affluent area on the edge of a city. I sometimes pop over to the local shopping area at lunchtime, and have been aware - because of the contrast - that a lot of the kids seem to be carrying more weight. I know it's not scientific, but I've definitely noticed it.

Our little boy and his two cousins - who are aged within a year of each other - are all about the right weight for their heights. They come with us on frequent walks, play together often, do not eat much in the way of junk food - perhaps the odd slice of pizza - but usually have plenty of fresh fruit & veg, smoothies, milk and water. We're lucky as we can afford these things, but also, we were brought up on a similar diet (perhaps not the smoothies). Exercise & good food seem to do the trick, but these things have to be made available to all.



Anon, Leicester | 19/07/2007 20:23:00

I've struggled with an eating disorder for over 30 years (I'm now 38) and a major cause of that was bullying as a child because I was a little overweight. My daughter was born at very nearly 10 pounds, and I was very concerned about the rate at which she gained weight. Because of my experiences with weight problems I was determined she wouldn't follow me, so I tried to enlist the help of my health visitor to monitor her weight gain and prevent too much gain. I was told I was making too much fuss and that she would sort herself out. Two years later, she eat plenty of fruit and veg and I wouldn't class her as a problem eater at all, but when she last saw her GP he made comments about we wouldn't want her to get any larger. I was flabbergasted, and told him I'd been

sugar | 20/07/2007 17:22:00

hi, i have an 11 year old boy who is obese. i also have 2 other older childern who are very thin. all the main meals in our house is the same, i feel that my youngest child is overweight because of lack of exercise and his interest in computer games . he also has time unsupervised while i am at work and this leads to him constantly snacking. i have taken him to a dietician who i didnt feel was very helpful. i have started cycling him to school in order to get him some exercise, and removed all unhealthy snacks away from temptation.

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Nanny J | 22/07/2007 12:28:00

As a child we didnt have sweets etc like todays youth. We were however fed too well, to the point we had to eat everything on our plates otherwise we could not leave the table. As we never sat as a family - us kids had to eat at the kitchen table whilst our parents eat in front of the TV. We did put lots of food into bags and hid them just so as not to eat it all, our stomachs used to hurt from the amount of food we were given.

I still have a weight problem and its been very difficult all my life to rid myself of the unwanted pounds. It does have an effect on kids.

Yet my granddaughter (5) is so fussy with her food its ridiculous, the toast if its the wrong colour she wont eat it, or butter, she seems to go on the packaging, if its not right she wont touch it. Even chocolate and sweets. Crazy. Yet when I was a kid you got one bag of sweets a WEEK, this was brought round by the grandparents. We had to make it last as there would be no more till he next time.

I do lay a lot of blame at the door of the fast food joints. This teaches kids to be fussy. My kids went to a restaurant rarely but when we did, they had good manners and ate everything, no fuss, no problems.

We should stop all this bad fast food junk, parents should cook homemade meals, treat the kids rarely. the maybe we can start to have our healthy kids again.

Friday night only as treat nite on a monthly basis.



Roger Burden | 22/07/2007 16:05:00


I was an obese child myself - and have been an obese adult most of my adult life; I overate as a child because I found it comforted me when I wasn't getting on with my parents, grandparents (who lived with us through much of my childhood), teachers and schoolmates. Also, I had no interest in or ability to play sports, which meant effectively that I took little or no exercise. Food is much more easily available now (when I was born, rationing was still in force), and that must make comfort eating much easier.

I suspect I was more unhappy than most at school (my own recent researches incline me to think that today I might have been regarded as "borderline autistic" - but there was no such condition in the 1950s, as far as I am aware) but I still think there wewre - and are - plenty unhappy enough to become addicrted to comfort eating.


robbienut | 22/07/2007 19:59:00

I do believe that there is a problem with weight in this country - the number of overweight children I see on a beach when we go there is growing all the time. When I was a child it was unusual - now it is more unusual to see a child who is just right for their age.

There are a lot of things which are contributing to this - lack of exercise and poor diet are probably the most telling. Lack of exercise doesn't just mean watching TV all the time - it is also exacerbated by the paranoia of many parents with regard to paedophiles etc who don't let their children walk to school or cycle anywhere.

You don't often see children out playing nowadays - when I was younger we were out most of the time if the weather was good. Meals were home cooked from fresh ingredients and we all ate together.

Parents have to take responsibility for their children's health - they buy the food so it is up to them to make sure that they make the right choices. Not putting too much on their plates is a sensible option as well.

I have three children - my eldest struggles with his weight mainly because he doesn't do enough exercise ( he is now 24). My youngest two are 5 and 3 - the 5 year old is a little livewire and never gains weight. My 3 year old is OK for her age but doesn't always want to eat things that are the healthiest option. They have all been brought up to eat healthily and been given plenty of options for what they eat. We rarely have crisps, sweets or biscuits. They actually prefer to eat fruit and drink water, but still my eldest struggles.

I do not think putting children on diets is the answer though - most foods are OK in moderation. Children just need guidance on the type of food they should eat and the amount - they also need encouragement to exercise - or just need to go out and play! If this happens the problem will solve itself.


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abip | 23/07/2007 15:46:00

hello all,

i think it is up to the parents to provide a healthy diet and exercise, and to set a good example to their children.

i am a childminder, we walk to and from school each day (1/2mile each way), the children play outside as much as they can regardless of the weather, and i only offer healthy food and snacks. our local school has a healthy eating policy and the children are very keen to be fit & healthy. we do yummy food and biscuits etc, but they are ones i make, so i know what the children are eating.

i think you have to be careful not to 'ban' all junk food, otherwise as a child grows up and can choose for themselves what they want to eat, sweets/crisps and junk are what they will make a beeline for, having been denied it as a child. (i will always eat sweets and i'm sure that is due to not having them as a child, but i'm able to control how many i eat!)

Sarah M | 23/07/2007 17:10:00

It started with midwives and health visitors -is your baby putting on enough weight? So with my third I was bullied into complimentary bottle feeding as my breastfeeding 'wasn't good enough' I have two children who are normal weight the third was skinny and a fussy eater until we found that he was coeliac -yes I blame myself for weakly giving in to the bullying and not making sure he got what I knew was best. He is still skinny but his height has now exceeded normal for where he was when we found out.

My point is that we all started off with our parenting being judged on how much weight we put on our children and made to worry about it, what can they expect after that?

I agree with the less exercise, more TV and just sitting and junk food availability and comfort food ideas as well. I also feel that although it is a growing(sorry, couldn't resist that) problem it doesn't seem as bad as media scares would have us believe as Julie said right at the beginning.



llinwyn | 23/07/2007 18:05:00


I have had 4 children & not one of them is overweight. My eldest is 24 & has 2 children of her own(6 & 3) not overweight, my eldest son is 21 & he's all muscle (not the body building type just manual labour type!),my 2nd son is 11 & theres more meat on a butchers apron but he does a lot of sports,football, rugby & tennis, my youngest is 9 & out of them all shes the chunkiest but then again not fat . I was always 7.5 stones with 23" waist until 11 years ago then presciption medication has made me over weight.I am 5' & weigh 11 stone, but I cannot do anything about it because if I stop the drugs I am very ill. So I am lucky I think that we have 'slim genes' in our family!! There is a family up the road from me both parents are obese & it looks like all 3 children are following suit plus they have a healthy eating lifestyle(better than me actually)

JL | 23/07/2007 18:14:00

I hate the way you lift a magazine or turn on the telly and it's all about being overweight. Yes I am slightly over weight but the media are making people like me feel I don't fit into society - so many women's mags only feature skinny models - and it makes us feel outcasts and ugly. All this talk about obese children will make them feel the same. Firstly I blame the fact that I believe it costs more to feed a family on all healthy foods unless they eat like rabbits. 2nd there is so much hype about fast food restaurants that todays children don't want to go to somewhere else. I think the government should subsidize places to make healthy food more affordable, and restaurants should encourage a wider range of food. I hate all the bad coverage about kids not all being an average size. We are all individuals, all shapes and sizes and being too thin can be as much as a problem. Many kids just have puppy fat which disappears as they get older but with all the talk in the media about obesity it is leading to more bullying. Don't penalise and treat overweight folk as outcasts, give us more affordable and more choices in food and then let us be ourselves, whatever we are or whatever we look like. I think too much hype on children's sizes will lead to more anorexia cases or suicides. Teenage years are hard enough. You may end up with a nation of perfect sized people but at what cost? I think you can educate people more about health and types of food but don't make such a huge issue out of it.



sheonagh | 23/07/2007 22:15:00


I can't understand how people think it's cheaper to eat junk food than buy fresh veg, fruit & meat. We don't eat large portions of meat so perhaps that's a reason, but we eat meat or fish most evenings. If you're in the habit of cooking proper food then you soon work out meals that are quick & healthy. Also you can let your oven or slow cooker do everything while you all do something else.

I am seeing a lot of overweight children around these days, and usually accompanied by overweight family members. It's cruel for kids to be like this, you can see they have difficulties with their mobility - walking, running, chests overexpanded and discomfort in the tight lower back area which is compensating for excess weight in the abdomen. Look at the shoes to see how the ankles are rotating inward to balance the body out and they have little energy or ease of movement.

I agree that it's a diet with many additives, chemicals and artificial fats & sweeteners that is stopping the body from using the food properly.

We have never referred to food like McDonalds or sweets as a treat or reward, it's just food or often "rubbish"! Mummy, can we have some rubbish today?!! And we've told the grandparents to try to remember that too. We avoid artificial sweeteners as I feel sure that this is a subject that will be exposed for the conspiracy of silence for the sake of economics that it is. I use sugar in baking and real butter, so much tastier, and it doesn't happen every day. Thankfully my kids are mad about fruit and love just about all vegetables, one loves meat , the other can take it or leave it. They were raised on home cooking from the womb, & I have fun making up their lunchboxes so that's their experience.

I think it's because my kids don't have to make an effort to lug their bodies around that they happily flit from activity to TV back to activity, so they're not couch potatoes and I don't have to impose a balance for them. Less fights!


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kate | 23/07/2007 22:56:00


Hi,

My elder daughter started putting on weight when she started secondary school.

She became less active because of a medical condition and comfort ate because she was depressed.

She has recently been diagnosed with an underactive thyroid and diabetes.

We assumed we knew the reason for her weight gain but were wrong.

Don't overlook other possibilities, keep an open mind.

Kate


Aladin | 24/07/2007 11:04:00

I have probably always been overweight and now am an obese adult. I was brought up with food as a reward, encouraged to clear my plate and all those things which we are now considered inappropriate.

I have two children, who are both in their mid teens and they are both very slim, one because he takes part in lots and lots of sport and the other because she watches what she eats. Despite encouragement she does not enjoy sport or being particularly active. I think encouraging children to make healthy food choices is important but it's also important to encourage a healthy/active lifestyle.



Pentangelli | 24/07/2007 11:59:00

My 16-year-old daughter put on a lot of weight entering her teenage years and now insists she feels comfortable with her size, although medically she would be classed as obese. She says she is 'happy' with her weight. As parents we are very concerned for her long-term health but she is either in denial or genuinely believes she is not as heavy as she is (she refuses to weigh herself). We have sought medical advice and my daughter did agree to take a course of tablets which restrict the absorption of fat in the diet. As soon as she finished the course she refused to go back to the surgery because she could not see any positive results from the course. She is of a happy disposition and is quite active taking into consideration her size. We are at our wits end as to how we can make her see what she is heading for in later life. She has a strong will but not when it comes to food. As parents we both work full-time which makes it very difficult to supervise her food intake, especially through the long summer break before she goes to six-form. What do you do as parents when your daughter insists that she is happy as she is?

Dorothy Minichiello | 24/07/2007 12:09:00

I can't say that I see "obese" children often however, I do see many that are out of shape, and have other physiological issues due to unhealthy habits. As the creator of my own health website (www.TheHealthyGlow.com) I have made it a point to educate others on the affects of diet and nutrition. It is a scientific fact that our food today is laced with horrible poisons such as stearates, preservatives and chemicals with lists too long to even mention here. One of the worst chemicals that excites your cells to death is MSG and it is in EVERYTHING under many names!!! -our body, no matter what age, retains these horrible things in the fat cells. The big problem I see today is TOXIC children and it is not always from junk food. We have devastated our food supply and there is no fresh water left in the US. Even our vitamins and supplements are carrying toxic fillers/excipients. The only way to good health is through whole food that does not promote acidity or excessive toxic burden in our bodies. We as parents must educate ourselves and MAKE THE TIME to seek out and prepare whole food nutritional meals. Convenience is literally killing us and making everyone sicker! It is time parents take control of their own health and start teaching by example. No matter what the tv shows you have the checkbook and you do the shopping!

kathleen neville | 24/07/2007 12:40:00

I have four children and only one of them is slightly plump ,he has just turned 13 so he has plenty growing to do yet.

I can only speak from my own experiences ,but i know that when i had less money i was more careful in my choice of foods and went for the healthy option ie bulking up meals with veg etc.

I still buy all the healthy foods but then throw in all the rubbish foods like cakes,crisps ,choc .....mainly because i have the extra money .

When i had my first child we didnt have all the games systems ,dvd players ,comp etc and we were more inclined to go out and do outdoor activities and my eldest spent most of time outside playing ..burning off calories.

My children went to school dinners till i found out they were taking the junk food option ..i now have them home for lunch..this is ok for me as i am at home and the school is near .

At our local primary school children that are over weight can opt out of sports day ..now that is madness .

I think we should educate people to take childhood obesity very serious ...we need to educate from the word go ..when a woman becomes pregnant and then follow through the different stages of the childs life.

I have watched my father suffer from weight related conditions and more recently watch him go through a triple heart by pass ..why would you want this type of future for your kids ..wake up that what i say ..change now .save your childs life

 



Julie | 24/07/2007 13:46:00

It is down to the parents at the end of the day but I believe that it's also down to the childs genes and make up. Children should have a variety of food in their life with limits on the bad stuff but they shouldn't be stopped from having the bad stuff as it will make them want it more, but if they're getting it in moderation then they're happy. Get the government to put away all the child molesters etc away for good not let them out to be near children then the children might be safer outside.

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Lisa Carpenter | 24/07/2007 13:57:00

I think it is society and tv with overweight children because of commercials with fast food and junk food! I have a daughter who looks too skinny and one daughter that is over weight but she is married and I have taught them both to eat healthy and exercise ! too many complain about overweight and then teens and kids become bullemia and so on .

Donna Falcone | 24/07/2007 16:34:00

As a parent who has always struggled with weight, growing up with a cabinet full of twinkies and a freezer ful of fudgesicles, I think that it is important from the start to develop good eating habits in children. In addition, it is vital to instill "choice making" awareness in children. Always provide them with choices when appropriate, and teach them how to balance their choices. Information is important... "this is great for good muscles... " "or this has lots of vitamin C... that's good for you". Restricting the diet seems to only focus people on what they cannot have. I have one son who will probably have to battle his weight. He carries his weight in his middle area, like is father and grandfather. On my husband's site both parents deal with diabetes, and both are soon to undergo the lapband procedure. I worry about him...my youngest. He is slender right now, but goes through periods where he appears chunky... usually right before a growth spurt. So, while I don't restrict him, I purchase foods that tip the scales toward health.... lots of fruit, whole grains, veggies.... and some icecream now and then.... rarely soda.... I also am very vocal about my ommission of partially hydrogenated oils from our house. I am an avid label reader... they laugh at me, but I know that it has to be getting into their brains. I guess it is about accountability.. .teaching children to honor their bodies, to make good choices, and to remember balance. There are no guarantees, so I am trying to give them all the information they need to be able to handle their choices independently some day.




Donna Falcone | 24/07/2007 16:37:00


I forgot to say, it's great to use the media as a HELPER..... like when the Olympics are sponsored by McDonalds!!! I laugh out loud.... Yup.... that's who WATCHES the Olympics because they are not fit enough to participate! LOL! My kids really respond to that, and begin to notice these things on their own. You are never too young for a critical eye~

ruth | 24/07/2007 16:40:00

In our town in Devon I notice many children overweight, accompanied by overweight parents/carers. I have one daughter age 16 who is extremely limited and fussy eater. This I didn't expect. From 12 she has rebelled against decent food and the mamoth dissent in our household forced me to allow her her own will through the teen years, which has been mostly food I consider unsuitable. She is proper weight for height, but unfortunately eats junk food 4 times a week. There are glimmers of her re-establishing some kind of healthier eating regime, but it has to come from her very strong-willed self. As a baby she was exclusively breastfed for 4 months, all wheat/gluten and chocolate prohibited until 12 months. Only occasionally did she eat bought jar food, mostly I fresh cooked vegetables or frozen down icecube portions for ease. Water was the only other liquid beside breastmilk. Cakes and biscuits were allowed in moderation from 1 and various fresh juices (diluted) added too. Bananas, apples, carrots raisins and celery were snack syandbys. My Mum and her auntie thought I was cruel and obsessive for choosing this diet for my daughter, but she has been very healthy, grown well and beginning to mature in a balanced way. i overhear her talking about healthy otions with other peers, while disputing my suggestions! Thats teenagers for you. I think she will readjust to healthier options, and maintain her health/weight balance. I did put thought and care into her early food experiences and found it as perplexing as any other thinking person; i.e. what to do for the best. Maybe its the encouragement to think and plan that is needed, there seems to be masses of information 'out there'. I am concerned about the amount of obesity around, contributed to by lack of general running around and walking places, when it isn't deemed safe any more for youngsters to play out of sight of parents. I think the middling age group is more obese than the current aged population due to the overuse of the car. This allows us to fit in more things, but that adds to stress, which reduces time for thinking about healthy food options and encourages us to cut down on preparation time as much as possible.

catdancer | 24/07/2007 16:42:00

I can't say I've seen many really obese children and agree with the previous comment. Really is a big fuss being made about a few children who may be overweight. Those children's parents need to make sure the child gets enough exercise and seek professional help about dietery issues..

julie d 24/07/2007 | 24/07/2007 17:12:00

I think we need to stop our kids eating to much junk food and get them of there computers and outside running around like we used to do when we were young then perhaps there wont be so much of a problem

Paula Murray | 24/07/2007 17:35:00


My son is a product of my poor lifestyle, it crept up on me really. He is not obese but he is overweight. I hold down 2 jobs and grab food frequently from the take away.

To try and rectify things we have started to go for walks as a family, I bought him a trampoline instead of a playstation three and we have tried to cut down the take aways to one night a week.

I dont think that advertising has a huge impact on us, I think we are intelligent enough to see campaigns for what they are.
We are to blame!

I would like to see more healthy choices at take aways and fast food outlets, admittedly the choices at supermarket cafes are fairly poor too and unfortunately very busy people often revert to these places.

Most of the diet issues in our area are ingrained through over 3 generations of deprevation and head burying. I think even Jamie Oliver would find difficulty braking the eating habits up here but continued education programmes in schools and youth clubs are certainly helping...


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Kerry | 24/07/2007 20:54:00

I see alot of child obesity where i live. At least 1 in every 5 kids is fat. My two sons are both ideal weight for height. My nephew is very obese for his age, he is 5 and looks and wears age 8 clothes. I feel parents give in to their kids too much. From an early age, i refused to give unhealthy food to my fussy toddlers, letting them go hungry till the next meal time, in which they ate almost everything on there plate and as a result will now opt for fruit or a small sandwich if hungry in between meals and eat a variety of foods at meal times. Also i encourage my sons to play outside in the garden and dig for worms, or water the garden. I think parents are to blame choosing a quiter life by pandering to their kids unhealthy wims!



lee | 24/07/2007 21:34:00

my parents let me eat what i wanted as a child and gave me a wide variety of meals as my dad was in the army . I tasted dishes from all over the world . With my daughter I have done the same . She will eat "junk" at school as she buys crisps , fizzy drinks ,sweets etc . I make sure she has a healthy diet morning and evening with fresh veg every day . she walks eveywhere and is quite active . I work in a school and I see obese children who at playtimes just sit and dont run around . I feel sorry for them as most children today just sit in front of the tv ,computers or playstations . where have the bike rides ,playing in the park , climbing trees ,just walking gone too?. I know its not safe now when we were kids but surely cant the parents help to encourage the children , even plan activities as a family . Hopefully as those children grow older and with encouragement they will cut down .

Christina | 24/07/2007 21:41:00

I do think that fast-food advertising influences children's eating habits, but it is totally up to the parents to monitor what their children are consuming. If given the chance, kids would eat junk all day, and we know it! My 11 month old son is over-weight already, he weighs 30 lbs. and is bigger than his 2 yr. old brother. I honestly don't know why he gained so much weight so fast, he was fed just the same as my 2 yr. old. The Dr. put him on a diet, he is only allowed no more than 30 ozs. of fluid a day, and I follow it religiously. I also think genes may play a role in weight gain, since most of my family have been overweight their whole lives, and have tried dieting without any real results. I myself am not overweight, but I have seen what children go through in school, at the mercy of other children teasing them, so I am going to take every measure to ensure my children do not have to endure that. Not only for their health, but also to protect them from the cruel teasing as well.



Morag | 25/07/2007 01:33:00

I have to say that, generally, as a nation, we are becoming fatter. When I, or my older children were at school, it was unusual for children - especially girls - to be overweight. It is accepted nowadays for children to be fat - bellies hanging out under short tops and over low cut jeans! Fast food, with no thought about what goes into it, lack of education about nutrition and our faster "get it quick" way of life doesn't help. We never had ready meals.We have more money to spend and we are spending it on making our children unhealthy. It is not kind to buy a takeaway for a child and not spend the time to prepare a healthy meal. This is not limited to children and more and more we see "fat families", passing bad eating habits down through the generations. The only way not to be fat is not to eat so much and to think about what you are eating - in extreme cases, I agree that letting your child become obese is neglectful and a form of abuse.


Sarah Hall | 25/07/2007 04:08:00

I belive that we as parent's need to be carefull what we view as obese. I do belive in eating healthy and exercising but everthing in moderation. If we are obsesing about weight versus health we are no dought passing on a poor body image. Children with a poor body image tend to be more prone to eating disorders, and a wide range of pyscological issues. My take on this issue is that I try to show my children what is right by what I do. I eat heathly and exercise. I will not take diet pills or starve myself. I hope that by example my children learn the proper treatment of their bodies.

Dawn | 25/07/2007 12:40:00

I do not believe that children tell the parents what they are eating or where they are going and what time they will be back, (if a time is even given!) A child is born and a parent shows that child the `right way` in life. i have watched programmes where parents give in to the children and allow them what they want, what planet do these parents live on? have you ever heard of a `healthy child is a happy child?`

My children all walk to school, (about a mile each way, Uphill on way there!) One has a paperound after school, One goes boxing twice a week, one at football three times a week. They are never still, and are always out and about doing something! There diet could be a improved a somewhat, but while they excersize as much as they do i dont fuss too much about it. They are all in the `correct manufactured size` clothing and are extremly happy. there s always something you can do to help your child, that you will both enjoy, but you got to get away from the daily grind of XBox, and sweets! when my children started football, i did a coaching course and i am now a FA Level 1 coach!

And dont even begin to say due to work commitments you haven`t got the time, make time! this is your childs future, and i`m sure your parents wanted the best for you as you do for them!

So come on parents if you have a obese child, get him/her off that chair and show them what can be achieved! do it together, as a family should do!


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Sarah Friedner | 25/07/2007 15:39:00


I think we as parents should are the best example for our children. What they see us doing is usually what they will do. If we can show them how to have an active healthy lifestyle, they will most likley follow our example. The younger the child is when we start, the better, but it is never too late to change.

Television may influence what a child wants to eat, but we as parents have the power to control what is available to them. If we keep the house stocked with healthy food, there will be only good choices. If we buy junk food, of course our children will want that! There are not many people who have the will power to grab an apple instead of chocolate cake if both are available.



JL | 25/07/2007 16:42:00

Just wanted to add a comment about programme on tv last night re children obsessed by their bodies. One child remarked that you had to be thin and pretty to have friends, others were throwing away food or starving because they thought they were too fat. At the end one girl revealed it had all lead to anorexia. Yes, educate children re health but also about deeper values. Stop making references about obesity and concentrate on educating all about what we eat and it's effects. Stop the labelling. Too thin is as bad as too fat. And by the way, I have 2 children who are fed the same meals every day, one is thin and the other fatter. So how is it all blamed on the parents???


beth | 28/07/2007 12:44:00

I was overfed as a child, and as a result I have been dieting most of my adult life. The result is that everytime I fell off the weight wagon I finished up fatter than before. I have serious issues with food especially portion sizes. Having said that my children are not overweight, but they are predisposed to putting weight on easily, and as such I have to think about what they eat all the time. but I don't want them to have hang ups about food! Parents have to take most of the responsibility for what they feed their children, but while you can buy a family size lasagne for a couple of quid why will they bother making one from scratch that will taste 100x better. Fresh fruit and veg can be expensive, but I think ready meals and Take away is also expensive. Schools need to increase physical activity and re-instate Home Economics- teach the children how to prepare healthy food from scratch on a budget. You can do some great meals in 30 mins. Maybe extend the school day to allow for these extras, then that would also help the vast number of working parents. Obesity will, like smoking, become a class thing, where you will be considered part of an underclass if you are fat and/or smoke. We need to educate people, or maybe leave them all to die young, it will cost the state less and it would be part of natural selection! Sorry that was me playing Devil's advocat.

Anne Nicol | 28/07/2007 15:01:00


My husband and I are obese, mostly or myself because I do not exercise and dont eat the right foods all the time. i ensure however my kids eat healthy foods and I don allow them fizzy drinks, they always tell me they are hungry and if i fed them every ime they would be obese too. As their mum I am responsible for what they eat and ensure they are not obese. I was overweight as a child and I dont want my kids being the same. I ensure they are outide playing every day and I only allow them their xbox in the winter when they cannot get out to play.

rayne sutcliffe | 28/07/2007 19:46:00


I have 2 children, but has congential heart disease. They both eat very healthy. unfortunatley I get pressure from my in law to put my as my younger child who is not disabled but taller and broader than his brother and a diet. She is totally obsest by other people weight and her owns. Her oppions have been voiced openly and at times offended people. I have on many occasions told her to keep her oppions to herself and my youngest son who is only 6 will not wear or eat anything that will make him either look or get fat. I would like to add he has been checked by the school nurse and is actually in the BMI 20 for his height and age. People should be educated properly not just in healthy eating but also how to cook healthy. Get the children involved in the kitchen , if they make a mess so what , it will clean up. I feel we live in a soicety I'm aftraid where the children is a commodity rather than part of a family.Some of the points below I aggree with. As regards to not letting the children go out of your site for fear, but if I was to go swimming with my family husband included it would cost me in my area nearly £20 which is a lot of money of our 2 weeekly wage packets. The whole picture needs to be looked at.

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Natalie - Dorset | 31/07/2007 08:07:00

I have two children and have worked with children all my career. Children are getting bigger but so are their parents.

Children are brought up needing instant reward by electronic gadgets, quick rushes by sugars and additives and poor parenting - befriending rather than caring. they are not allowed to walk to school for papanoia fear of being abducted. We also live in a society that does not covert and treasure their children - it wants them to be quiet and out of the way - we are incredibly unchildfrienly in this country unlike europe who dote and welcome children.

My daughter is obsessive about her food and can't let a piece of anything sweet sit in the kitchen she has to have it. i understand this as i know she has learnt it from me. i have been diagnosed with a compulsive eating disorder and if as a baby she cried she had a bottle rammed in her mouth to quiten her - i trained her to be like that. without my family living near by and no expereince of babies i didn't know what to do otherwise. my son is completely different as a second baby, he was breast fed as i didn't rush back to work but stayed at home, he was fed when he used his hungry cry and has continued this into his life - he can forget that cake and it doesn't bother him at all. he's slim and looks like a misfit in our family of biggies. doctors write me off as a naurotic when i ask for help for my daughter and her eating - they think i am making up the fact she is obsessed to the point of stealing food and hoarding it. they gave me some crap leaflets about 5-a-day.

i do not buy food if it contains ingrediants i can't pronounce, cook things from fresh not ready made meals and jars and if i go shopping with a list i can buy cheaper using organic foods instead of bargin crap stuff - none of that however has altered the fact that my family is large.

i would also like to challenge the idea that fat only means unfit. i am size 26 and at my local aerobic class can wipe the skinny ones under the table.

i agree with the poster above me who feels the constant pressure of in-laws to put their children on a diet. my mother in law doesn't care if my daughter is in the room before making rude comments and putting her down for her weight. i have spoken to her about it and yet she continues to do so.

my daugher already has a poor self image of her self and has asked me about diets. i do my best to nuture her self-esteem and show her how to eat healthy - now i know what damage that bottle feeding did to her alongside my own issues - i have tried to not make a big deal of anything. i am trying to teach her to slow down and allow time to listen to what her body is telling her. I have learnt to listen and it actually tells me that i prefer to eat fruit and veg and the crap doesn't appeal - but when we give into the life lessons of highs and cravings of the crap we crumble and binge. Deprivation of anything a complusive person wants leads to high binges.

our society and especially government needs to wake up to the damage diets do to our lives. the statistics are so obvious that they fail everyone. stop dieting and you stop getting fatter and fatter and fatter. eat what your body tells you and you'll lose weight. put daily exercise on at school and tell parents the real truth about children being molested - your family and friends are more likely than the stranger down the road - so let these kids get out and ride bikes and walk to school. stop pressuring parents to run back to work because of high mortages and give new mums real help with their babies not monetry one offs.



Steve | 01/08/2007 16:53:00


Both my children were fed proper food from a very early age. The occasional treat of fast food was acceptable. They are now 12 & 18 years old. Slim, athletic and enjoy a healthy life style. The parents are the ones responsible, for their childrens well being. So lets educate them. It is more expensive to eat fast food than it is to have a proper meal with fresh ingredients.


lorraine | 11/08/2007 18:47:00

well i have seen a lot of big children around and growen ups to but i think you just need to keep an eye on your child when you can let them know whats good for them and whats not so good and your right they are attracted to macdonalds because they love the food they get their but you just need to plan it out when to have your macdonalds say once a week and it can be a treat for them something to look forward to

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Kathy | 13/08/2007 09:28:00

When I was growing up, we only had tv, but we were only allowed to watch it at certain times. We spent an awful lot of time outside - playing with the neighborhood kids, riding bicycles, playing ball, etc. From what I remember, obese children were almost non-existant. There were a few, but not enough to fill up the fingers on one hand.

As time progressed, over the years, the number of adults and children who are obese has really been on the rise. I can think of many reasons for this. Let's start with children who are pudgy or overweight: 1. They sit at computers, games or television in stead of getting physical exercise like we used to do. 2. Most kids nowdays do not have a number of chores to do - feed the chickens, slop the hogs, milk the cows, pick the beans in the garden, etc. 3. A lot of children are taught that food is good for them, even if it is fast food and junk. Through lack of parental control these days, parents are not watching what their children eat, i.e., chips while watching tv, microwave dinners, tv dinners, frozen sandwiches, etc. 4. Yes, my mother used to cook meals from scratch. I also cook most of my meals from scratch. When we go out to eat, we try to pick things from the menu that we CAN eat - vegetables, fruit, salad, and a simple meat - steak, fish, chicken, etc.

I feel the adults have a lot to do with the size of their children, as well as, themselves. I wonder if some of the larger people see themselves as others see them? If they did, they would be in a hurry to change the physical appearance.

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