BooksForKidsBlog

Monday, October 01, 2007

Epidemic of Obesity: Ending the Food Fight by David Ludwig

"EPIDEMIC OF OBESITY ON RISE IN U.S." the headline reads. "PREVALENCE OF OBESITY AMONG BOYS AND GIRLS AGES 6-11 QUADRUPLES OF THE PAST 25 YEARS!"

The statistics are grim. Since 67 percent of children overweight between 11 and 14 years of age will remain overweight or obese throughout their adult years, their clocks are already ticking on the likelihood of cardiovascular disease, Type-B diabetes, and other diseases that formerly had their onset in late middle age, but now show up in children and young adults. The prediction is that the current generation of children and teens will be the first American generation to show a decline in life expectancy (not to mention being the death knell for Medicare!) For parents these warnings are ominous. But limiting food for children goes against all we hold dear!

Ending the Food Fight by David Ludwig offers help in the emotionally charged battleground between healthy living and the fast food, television, and Game Boy environment in which our children live. Ludwig, a specialist in endocrincology and professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, has recently (2007) published this book for parents dealing with the problem of childhood obesity. Director of the Boston Children's Hospital Optimal Weight for Life program (OWL), Dr. Ludwig has the latest studies and personal experience counseling young patients and their families to draw upon in this useful and upbeat book.

Dr. Ludwig agrees that there is no magic panacea for overweight in the modern world. He recognizes the role of individual biology in body composition, but firmly points out that our genes haven't altered since the World War II period, when overweight children were rare in America. The difference therefore lies in our behavior and environment. Lack of exercise required for daily living and the dearth of outdoor play, added to the ease of obtaining high calorie foods 24-7, have created a situation in which 12 percent of Caucasian and 20 percent of African American, Hispanic, and Native Americans are fat. With 60 percent of adults overweight or obese, some children rarely see a normal-sized person--except in television shows or advertisements for fast food!

As a first move toward weight control, Ludwig advocates a nine-week program which begins with a "great cleanout" in which the whole family gathers up what he calls "fake food," chips, cookies, microwaveable mac and cheese, etc., and throws it away. The family together shops for "real food," lean meats, whole grain breads and cereals, nuts, fruits, vegetables, healthy oils, and low- or non-fat dairy products. Ludwig leans toward avoidance of high-glycemic foods (white flour products, sugars, potatoes), especially in the initial phase, and insists that the all members of the family, however slim, eat the same foods. Quantities are not usually limited--within reason. The very choice to eat home-prepared meals of natural foods is frequently all it takes to see children grow gradually slimmer.

He also advocates building in outdoor playtime and substituting active family outings for television watching, video games, and eating out at fast food restaurants. Rather than insist on obese children actually losing pounds, he favors a lifestyle in which the child will maintain a steady weight as he or she grows out of obesity. He pays especial attention to the overweight teen, who, unlike young children, has to take charge of his or her eating and exercise program to make progress. Recipes and menu suggestions are appended, along with an extensive bibliography.

A recent book which is both informed by scholarship and written in a reader-friendly style, David Ludwig's Ending the Food Fight is a good place to start toward a longer and healthier life for all members of the family.

Much of the same information and advice can be found in the familiar bulleted style of the 2006 Conquering Childhood Obesity for Dummies which also advocates natural foods, avoiding fast food and fake food vending machines at school, empty calorie snacks, and sedentary lifestyles. Another substantial book published in 2006 is The Healthiest Kid in the Neighborhood by Dr. William Sears, et al.

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11 Comments:

  • Excellent review. This is one book that will fly "onto" my shelves with my next book order. I've realize I really don't have enough materials on this topic. Shannon

    By Blogger Going Crunchy, at 8:26 PM  

  • Good stuff. Thanks for a great review. Wholesome, home-cooked food is where it's at, but as a woman of a certain age -- as opposed to kids fighting the battle of the bulge -- I have found limiting quantities to be the key to victory.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 8:36 AM  

  • "With 60 percent of adults overweight or obese, some children rarely see a normal-sized person..."

    Note that if 60% of adults are obese are overweight, they are in fact normal-sized. Its the thin ones that are not normal. I suspect you mean '...some children rarely see a healthy-sized person...'

    Sk

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 8:42 AM  

  • Frankly, just getting rid of high-fructose corn syrup, or products that use that, will pretty much take care of the problem.

    By Blogger Eric, at 9:01 AM  

  • Its not so much an epidemic of fat kids as an epidemic of lazy, indulgent parents. If you need a book to figure out not to stop at McDonalds for dinner and to turn off the playstation and boot the kids outside... we're in bigger trouble than we think.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 9:11 AM  

  • It is to be hoped that those of you commenting have children, one of which may be affected by being fat. I have a grandchild...one of 4 that is affected and in her case the genetics are so plain they are in her body and on her face! Add to that a parent that uses food in unhealthy ways and you have the problem we face. We try daily to control what and he does everything to overcome that when he has her. Courts could care less. But the problem in our case is a tiny bit easier because most of it is
    genetic and we hope with the addition of exercise and better eating and understanding will, in the end, help her. But, I truly am tired of people taking pot shots at "fat" people. It seems to me that most insufferable people require something to complain about when it comes to other people and choose to ignore the problems in their own persons.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 9:51 AM  

  • I really wonder if fat kids weren't safer back in the days that the only completely untested made-up voodoo that their desperate-for-a-cure parents inflicted on them was bloodletting and leeches. Has it occured to anyone on this full-speed-ahead campaign to bully every fat child and teenager into an eating disorder that anorexia and bulemia are basically incurable with a death rate for them hovers around 40%? Contemplate Terry Schiavo, who ended up with a dead mind in a live body precisely because she wasn't good enough back when she had a live mind in a fat body -- is that what you want for your children?

    If that's not what you want, then maybe you shouldn't be so desperate to follow every self-proclaimed "expert" with some made-up pseudo-scientific babble which has either never faced a scientific test, or has been debunked by scientific tests.

    By Blogger cathyf, at 10:39 AM  

  • Almost all children were slim during WW2....thanks to rationing. I remember butter and sugar, and meat being rationed. Look up the foods that were rationed and you will have a healthy, well balanced diet.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 1:16 PM  

  • There can be no doubt that eating habits, food choices and life styles are major contributors to obesity. People complaining about genetics are looking for easy excuses. "I'm big boned"??? Puhleeze. Stop stuffing your face with twinkies, drop the game controller and move that big body. It's amazing how a common sense recommendation to throw out junk food, eat real food and get exercise alarms some people that the fat police will cause anorexia.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 5:03 PM  

  • A SYDNEY hospital has become possibly the first in the world to appoint a doctor dedicated to treating overweight children in an urgent attempt to tackle the nation's obesity epidemic. The appointment, at The Children's Hospital at West mead, comes as the number of overweight and obese children surveys to more than 1.5 million and health systems struggle to deal with the fallout. http://www.phentermine-effects.com

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 5:37 AM  

  • This comment has been removed by the author.

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 11:41 PM  

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