| NEWS
Childhood
Obesity A Serious Problem
CHICAGO, May 1, 2002
A dramatic increase in diabetes and other diseases related
to childhood obesity in the United States has added
millions of dollars to health care costs, a study said
Wednesday.
"As
overweight children become overweight adults, the diseases
associated with obesity and health care costs are likely
to increase even more," said the report from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The
study, published in the May issue of Pediatrics, the
journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said
a review of hospital records found that "the proportion
of discharges with obesity-associated diseases has increased
dramatically in the past 20 years."
Researchers
culled hospital discharge records, comparing obesity-related
hospitalizations of 6- to 17-year-olds between 1979
and 1981 with those from 1997 through 1999.
Diabetes
diagnoses nearly doubled, accounting for 2.36 percent
of child hospitalizations in the late '90s vs. 1.43
percent in the late '70s. Diagnoses of obesity alone
tripled to reach 1 percent of hospitalizations.
Hospital
costs for diseases related to childhood obesity increased
from $35 million in 1979 to $127 million in 1999, according
to the study. About 13 percent of children and adolescents
are overweight or obese, more than double the number
two decades ago. Experts blame TV, computer games, lack
of safe playgrounds and other factors that encourage
kids to be sedentary — plus more access to super-sized
portions of high-calorie foods.
At
the same time, more children are suffering Type 2 diabetes,
a dangerous disease that once struck mostly in middle
age. Obesity also can worsen asthma and spark gallbladder
disease. People even can die from obesity caused sleep
apnea, Dietz notes, when fat in the back of the throat
combines with large tonsils to block the airway.
CDC
researchers culled hospital discharge records, comparing
obesity-related hospitalizations of 6- to 17-year olds
between 1979 and 1981 with those from 1997 through 1999.
Diabetes
diagnoses nearly doubled, accounting for 2.36 percent
of child hospitalizations in the late '90s vs. 1.43
percent in the late '70s, they reported Wednesday in
Pediatrics.
Diagnoses
of obesity alone tripled to reach 1 percent of hospitalizations.
Other
obesity-related hospitalizations were more rare but
rising rapidly — sleep apnea rose fivefold and
gallbladder disease tripled. Asthma cases complicated
by obesity rose 40 percent.
The
study may surprise parents, but not obesity specialists
who called it high time someone pointed out the growing
danger to youngsters.
"The
kids who are fat are getting really fatter," said
Dr. Nazrat Mirza of Children's National Medical Center,
who has patients as young as 5 with obesity-caused sleep
apnea.
The
study "represents just the tip of the iceberg,"
she said — because doctors often don't record
obesity on hospital discharge records. That's because
insurance companies don't pay to treat it until the
child comes down with a formal illness, she complained.
The
government brought together star athletes Dominique
Dawes, Herschel Walker and Martina Navratilova Wednesday
to publicize the study and urge kids to stay slim by
simply getting active.
"Get
up and go outdoors," urged Education Secretary
Rod Paige. "Swim, hike, ... dribble, slam-dunk.
Do whatever, just move your body."
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