by long2bfree » Wed Nov 30, 2011 2:12 am
I'm a bit late to this post, but thank you to Mrs R for bringing it to the top again so I saw it. I was intrigued by the question and all of your takes on the issue. For me, I think especially when it comes to children, there needs to be a distinction drawn before we even call them obese. As all of you are aware, children come in many shapes and sizes and grow and develop at differing rates. The chubby kid at 13 doesn't need to be put on a diet (thank you mum

), they just haven't fully developed as yet. Now, there are some children and teens who qualify as morbidly obese. In these cases, I do believe intervention needs to occur - and that can happen in any number of ways (teaching the child/teen what is healthy/unhealthy, portion sizes, sending information home to parents, etc.). So I think a distinction between BMI obese and morbid obesity needs to be drawn (the average sized woman today is actually considered obese on the body mass index score, sad to say) before a determination of abuse could be decided. (There have actually been cases in the US where a 4 or 5 year old kid has the heart health of an 80 year old due to being so morbidly obese. The parent's reasoning? "Well, he wanted it so I let him have what he wants."

Not the case in every situation, but there's one example.)
And, the unfortunate truth is, when you are living in poverty, buying the cheap, low nutritional value, crappy food does allow your money to go further (compare the price of chicken nuggets to chicken breasts...) which for many is all that matters with several mouths to feed.
Very interesting debate here. Take care all....
-long2bfree
I'm a bit late to this post, but thank you to Mrs R for bringing it to the top again so I saw it. I was intrigued by the question and all of your takes on the issue. For me, I think especially when it comes to children, there needs to be a distinction drawn before we even call them obese. As all of you are aware, children come in many shapes and sizes and grow and develop at differing rates. The chubby kid at 13 doesn't need to be put on a diet (thank you mum :roll: ), they just haven't fully developed as yet. Now, there are some children and teens who qualify as morbidly obese. In these cases, I do believe intervention needs to occur - and that can happen in any number of ways (teaching the child/teen what is healthy/unhealthy, portion sizes, sending information home to parents, etc.). So I think a distinction between BMI obese and morbid obesity needs to be drawn (the average sized woman today is actually considered obese on the body mass index score, sad to say) before a determination of abuse could be decided. (There have actually been cases in the US where a 4 or 5 year old kid has the heart health of an 80 year old due to being so morbidly obese. The parent's reasoning? "Well, he wanted it so I let him have what he wants." :shock: Not the case in every situation, but there's one example.)
And, the unfortunate truth is, when you are living in poverty, buying the cheap, low nutritional value, crappy food does allow your money to go further (compare the price of chicken nuggets to chicken breasts...) which for many is all that matters with several mouths to feed.
Very interesting debate here. Take care all....
-long2bfree