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U.S. childhood obesity likely worse than thought

Cristina Rodriguez, Associated Press
June 4, 2004

LITTLE ROCK, ARK. -- Forty percent of public schoolchildren in Arkansas are overweight, and nearly one in four is obese, a sign that obesity among children nationwide is probably far worse than health officials had thought.

The findings are the broadest and most recent comprehensive look at children's weights, the result of a state law in Arkansas, where state officials have made obesity a top issue.

"I think we'll find as we go along that Arkansas is not that much more obese than other parts of the country," said Dr. Carden Johnston, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics. The "Arkansas data is the best that we have because it's cross-sectional."

The Arkansas numbers paint a more dire picture than previous national studies. Those have indicated that about 30 percent of American children are overweight or obese. Those falling into the obese category account for about 15 percent.

In Arkansas, about 22 percent of the children are considered obese while 18 percent are overweight. Fifty-eight percent are normal weight, and 2 percent are underweight.

Those results, released Thursday in Williamsburg, Va., at a Time-ABC News obesity summit, represent 276,000 of Arkansas' 450,000 public school students.

"This is a childhood issue now and it's sobering to see the number of children who have it," Johnston said. "The whole society will take obesity more seriously."

Arkansas already has removed vending machines from elementary schools and set up a Child Health Advisory Committee to help parents get their children to normal weights.

Last year Arkansas legislators passed a law requiring schools to find out the body-mass index of all schoolchildren and report to their parents. Health officials say the benefit of spotting at-risk children outweighs the stigma of branding them as too heavy.

Two-thirds of U.S. adults are classified as either overweight or obese by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

And while some studies indicate a higher rate of people in the South are overweight than the national average, some researchers believe the Arkansas numbers are reflective of children across the country.

"This is a trend we're seeing nationwide. The lack of physical activity, the nutritional behaviors that we have developed over the years didn't start in Arkansas and it's not going to end in Arkansas," said Joy Rockenbach, program director at the Arkansas Center for Health Improvement, which conducted the study.

Johnston said the far-reaching study will enable researchers to compare data across socio-economic and racial groups and identify trends.


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