Kids have trouble keeping weight off
Section: Health
Cheryl Wittenauer, Associated Press Writer
ST. LOUIS - Heavy children who lost weight kept the pounds off better through weight maintenance follow-up, but even that wasn't terribly successful over two years, researchers reported.
The less-than-perfect results underscore the challenge in fighting the nation's obesity epidemic. About 34 percent of American children are overweight.
A team led by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis found that obese children who lost weight kept it off if they were in a maintenance program, but its effectiveness waned over time.
The research involving 150 overweight 7- to 12-year-olds is one of the first large-scale studies to evaluate the long-term effects of weight-loss maintenance strategies in children.
The study, which appeared in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association, also is the first to look at whether heavy kids benefited from being encouraged to play with more physically active peers, cope with teasing, and develop an improved body image.
"We know from the adult field that the biggest challenge is not losing weight — it's keeping it off in the long term," said lead author Denise Wilfley, who heads the weight management program at Washington University.
Kids face the same struggle, she said.
The researchers studied obese youngsters from 1999-2004 at a university clinic in San Diego, where Wilfley used to teach. The children weighed at least 65 percent more than their recommended weight. All of the children in the study also had at least one parent who was overweight.
Each child and parent went through a five-month weight-loss program that set goals and emphasized healthy eating and exercise. They were also counseled by behavioral therapists.
On average, after five months, the children lost about 11 percent of their weight. They were then randomly assigned to one of three groups for four months.
One group was given no further instruction. Another group focused on self-monitoring and vigilance and used other behavior skills, trying to lose weight right away if they regained it.
In the third group, the youngsters were guided into play dates that involved physical activity and healthy eating; they were encouraged to make friends with more physically active peers. They also were counseled on body image and how to cope with teasing.
Researchers checked progress after one year and again after two years.
Those in the behavior skills and social groups were better able to keep weight off in the short term than those who had no intervention. However, the effects waned somewhat during follow-up. The kids left to their own devices regained their lost pounds, and then some, after two years.
The best outcome was for socially adept children who were encouraged to change their playmate networks. Most of those children were able to maintain nearly the same weight they had after the weight-loss program.
More work needs to be done to combine the best of the approaches, Wilfley said, perhaps extending the time spent teaching skills to maintain weight.
The alarming number of obese kids means researchers have to develop better ways of helping them lose and keep the pounds off, Wilfley said.
She plans to pursue the idea that spending time with healthy and physically active peers can help kids control their weight over the long haul.
Dr. David Ludwig of Children's Hospital in Boston praised the study's family-based effort. However, he said it wasn't large enough to "make a confident, definitive statement about which approach is better" at maintaining weight loss.
Terry Huang, childhood obesity director at the National Institutes of Health, which funded the study, said the social group's better results are exciting.
"It's not enough to focus on behavior modification," he said. "We have to start looking at obesity in the social context."
For two San Diego teens, the strategies were helpful.
As a chubby second-grader, "I used to look at myself in the mirror, and think, 'Oh, I'm so fat,'" said Katie Roetker, now 15. "Most days (now) I look in the mirror and think, 'looking good.'"
Katie, who took part in the new study, eats more fruits, vegetables and grains. She has given up fast food, and walks and takes dance classes.
Claire Carlson, 17, was nearly 30 pounds overweight when she was part of a pilot for the study in 1999.
Now, she says, "Eating healthy and exercising is second nature to me."
She's on the school swim team and surfs almost daily.
More Articles
- Test Show That Red Bull Can Lead to Heart Trouble
- Losing Weight is Easier than Ever. Learn the basics.
- Placstic Surgeon Blamed For Kanye's Mom's Death Arrested
- Jeferrson Community Health Care
- Business of Art Summit with special host, Todd Mouton, of LPB's
- Something you can't Fathom!
- He's Pregnant?
- Mental health plans lie fallow
- Fewer breast patients may need chemo
- Christmas lights found with potentially unsafe levels of lead
- First rise in U.S. teen births since '91
- Report: U.S. teen births rise
- Depression, anorexia, childbirth affect sex life
- Study: Try honey for children's coughs
- Study: Immaturity may spark teen crime
- Mandela: Halting new HIV infections key
- The New Attention Deficit Disorder
- UNHEALTHY SITUATION
- More Young Americans Are Contracting HIV
- Prostate Cancer Treatments Often Compound Existing Health Problems
- Mold follows SUNO to new campus
- Six organizations have been awarded grants from the Americas New Orleans Fund to expand services for children with mild to moderate mental health illness,
- Human skin cells reprogrammed to act like stem cells
- Heart disease kills more women under 45
- Atty: Woman wasn't told donor was a risk
- Recovery czar nods to community clinics
- U.S. sets record in sexual disease cases
- Healthy Chocolate?
- 4 get AIDS virus from organ donor
- Grants focus on children's mental health
- Fighting fat and climate change
- Reform group takes pulse of La. health care quality
- Dieting hardest for emotional eaters: study
- Girl born with 8 limbs conscious, smiles
- Free health fairs offered
- Report: Abstinence programs don't work
- Swiss study has some surprises on marijuana use
- A quarter of adults clinically obese across 63 countries
- Staph infections putting local schools on edge
- Poll: Most OK birth control for schools
- HIV infection rate drops in Zimbabwe
- 'Superbug' concern at New York schools
- US schools wage war against obesity
- Fight over child health care persists
- Brain study: Sleepy, grumpy and ... primitive?
- Staph screening said may wipe out germ
- City to buy site for new VA hospital and be given old one
- Life with diabetes: Outliving the prognosis
- Free flu shots on Thursday
- Saving Millions of Children's Lives Is Possible
- Hospital to help sickle cell patients
- More tests urged on colds medicines
- Staph fatalities may exceed AIDS deaths
- Doctors discuss theories on aging brains
- Cancer death rates dropping fast
- Touro, Ochsner engage in healthy competition
- Infant cold medicines pulled off market
- Study: Statin helps prevent heart attack
- LA gets millions for HIV testing purposes
- Kids have trouble keeping weight off
- Black Women Get Less Breast Cancer Treatment
- Studies tout treating mini-strokes fast
- How to break bad eating habits
- Breast cancer chemo may damage heart
- Obesity a problem in HIV population
- Bush vetoes child health insurance plan
- Obesity may push U.S. health costs above Europe
- Doctors report on heart attacks in kids
- Study ties certain cancers, divorce rate
- Wal-Mart expands $4 drugs program
- Cancer walk gets going Saturday
- Study: Firms should help unhappy workers
- Health bus to provide free shots to residents
- ADA gives seal to Wrigley sugar-free gum
- Smoking ban clears the air in La. eateries
- Seniors balk at ban on free doughnuts
- Doctors to separate conjoined twins
- Study says soccer is better than jogging
- Gang member jailed for selling fake Viagra
- Officials say more should get flu shots
- E. coli fears spark lettuce recall
- Diabetics try new round-the-clock sensor
- Fewer sodas in school, industry says
- Get More by Doing Less
- MDs use experimental cooling on Everett
- Birth control pill may cut cancer risk: study
- Tangerine peel could help fight cancer
- Burger King unveils healthier kids menu
- 5 Medical Tests Every Woman Should Have:No matter what your age, here's how to make sure you're in good health
- Pregnant smokers may suffer depression
- FDA considers additional food labels
- Avoid school strain: Unstuff that backpack
- Heart attacks drop after Scottish smoking ban
- CDC: Suicide rate among U.S. girls soars
- Breast cancer more deadly in black women
- Prostate screenings offered
- Doctor warns consumers of popcorn fumes
- Fat toddlers at risk for iron deficiency
- Taboo stops pregnant women revealing baby worries: British survey
- Fresh spinach from California recalled
- Sexually transmitted wart virus increases mouth cancers
- Miss. ranked fattest state in nation
- New Noroviruses Boost Stomach Flu
- Morning-after pill sales jump as access eases
- WHO ties rising population, new diseases
- Two St. Bernard nursing home directors testify about evacuations
- Survey: Seniors have sex into 70s, 80s
- Puffer fish sold as salmon kills 15
- Sexuality after cancer treatment: What men can expect
- Kids' high blood pressure goes untreated
- How to manage your stress
- Study: Virus may contribute to obesity
- Stem Cell Research Petition Removed From Governor's Website
- Plain Soap as Good as Antibacterial
- Glaucoma Could Be Treated With Alzheimer's Drugs, New Study
- Fisher-Price recalling almost a million toys
- Local hospitals on life support, leaders to tell Congress Wednesday
- Dr. Anna Pou Reacts To Orleans Grand Jury Decision
- POST-KATRINA DEATH RATE IN NEW ORLEANS SHOWS SIGNIFICANT INCREASE
- Transition Tips for New Stay-At-Home and Working Moms
- Depression
- Ultrasound screening may catch ovarian cancer early
- Diabetes Cuts 8 Years Off Life
- Ten Ways to Support a Friend Facing Illness
- 11 Tips For Good Posture
- Tips for a Good Night Sleep
- Taking That First Step
- Female Personal Trainers on the Rise
- Cardio Fun
- Cancer’s Natural Enemy
- BBQ lovers may have higher breast cancer risk
- Eat Right and Feel Great!
- It Ain’t Easy Being Green/Strap In, Work Out
- Get Rid Of Cellulite Through Exercise
- Ad Limits Seen as Way to Curb Youth Smoking and Drinking
- Black Men and Diabetes: Preventing It, Managing It
- iabetes may have more DNA damage in their sperm, possibly hampering fertility, a preliminary study shows.
- Xavier Still Tops at Placing African American Students in Medical School
- Train Like An Athlete
- How to Improve Your Stamina
- Excersise To Add On Years
- Acupuncture, exercise help ease pregnancy pains
- TYRA COVERS SHAPE MAGAZINE
- Health fair puts a new face on diabetes
- Sleepless in New Orleans
- African-Americans and Diabetes
- 54 Women's Group Sign Pledge to Help Eradicate AIDS in Black Americans
- Cancer Statistics for African Americans





