In the study to to examine the
evidence for the benefits and harms of screening and
earlier treatment of overweight
in children and adolescents in clinical settings,
researchers found that BMI measurement to detect overweight in older
adolescents
could identify those at increased risk of developing
adult obesity, and its
consequent morbidities. Promising interventions to
address overweight adolescents in
clinical settings are beginning to be reported but are
not yet proven to have
clinically significant benefits; nor are they widely
available. Screening for the
purposes of overweight categorization in children under
age 12 to 13 who are not
clearly overweight may not provide reliable risk
categorization for adult obesity.
Theoretical harms may occur from overweight labeling or
from induced individual and
parental concern. Screening approaches are further
compromised by the fact that
there is little generalizable evidence for interventions
that can be conducted in
primary care or are widely available for primary care
referral. Despite this, the
fact that many trials report short- to medium-term
modest improvements
(approximately 10%–20% decrease in percent overweight or
a few units' change in BMI)
suggests that overweight improvements in children and
adolescents are possible. Experts have identified pragmatic clinical
recommendations for lifestyle changes that
could be applied to all children and adolescents
regardless of risk. While
monitoring growth and development in children and
adolescents through BMI
documentation at visits is prudent, care should be taken
not to unnecessarily label
children and adolescents as overweight or at risk for
overweight until more is known
about BMI as a risk factor, and effective interventions
are available(1).
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Back to Obesity http://kylejnorton.blogspot.ca/p/obesitys-complications.htmlt
(1) "Screening and Interventions for Childhood Overweight [Internet]". by Whitlock EP, Williams SB, Gold R, Smith P, Shipman S.
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