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Is Your Doctor Honest Enough about Your Child Being Overweight?

January 5th, 2012

Being delicate or being irresponsible – these are the two possibilities about your doctor providing misleading information. This is the case when it comes to important questions like childhood obesity. A problem that is haunting the country remains tremendously unspoken about, which makes the situation even worse.

According to a very troubling study, less than a quarter of the parents of overweight children have received information about this condition from a family physician. The vast majority of doctors make no mention of excess weight and the dangers connected to it.

Many parents are willing to undertake specific corrective measures, as long as a doctor gives professional advice. Otherwise, the situation is likely to remain unchanged and the condition will probably get worst.

People often lack information about appropriate nutrition, especially when it comes to the dietary needs of children. The fact that many doctors keep silent about it does nothing to increase awareness and knowledge concerning obesity.

Obesity is a serious medical problem rather than an aesthetic one. It is the responsibility of doctors to warn parents about early signs of inappropriate weight accumulation. A healthy diet can change the trend, thus improving the health of a child and minimizing the chance of other medical complications connected to being overweight.

According to analysis of federal government data, only 22 percent of the parents of overweight children received a warning from a doctor. The analysis pool consisted of 5000 instances of overweight children.

Nearly 58 percent of the parents said that a doctor never really told them that the child was obese. The findings of this analytical experiment were published in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine journal.

Obesity statistics are exceptionally troublesome in the US and the fact that many doctors keep silent about it adds nothing to improving the situation. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, childhood obesity figures have tripled over the past 30 years.

In the 1980s, seven percent of the children in the US were obese. In 2008, the figure reached nearly 20 percent, a staggering increase. The percentage of teens experiencing obesity problems went up from five to 18 percent.

Medics and school representatives are certainly to blame alongside parents. Many parents have all the great intentions in the world but they lack the knowledge about the symptoms of the problem and the best road to follow.

It is curious to find out why doctors are keeping silent about this problem. One possibility is that they are failing to consider childhood obesity a serious problem. An alternative explanation is that they want to spare the feelings of parents who will feel uneasy about the obesity of a child. Whichever the reason is, it demonstrates lack of responsibility and the desire to inform society about this problem.

Do you receive information from your doctor about the weight of your child and the healthy range for the age? Are you intentionally asking your doctor to provide such information? What could the reason for the silence of a healthcare professional on the topic of obesity be?

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