Renée R. Jenkins MD FAAP Professor of Pediatrics Howard University
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What Caring Adults Can DoWhat Caring Adults Can DoTo Support Healthy Self-Esteem, Body Image and To Support Healthy Self-Esteem, Body Image and
Well-BeingWell-BeingOctober 17, 2007October 17, 2007
What Caring Adults Can DoWhat Caring Adults Can DoTo Support Healthy Self-Esteem, Body Image and To Support Healthy Self-Esteem, Body Image and
Well-BeingWell-BeingOctober 17, 2007October 17, 2007
Renée R. Jenkins MD FAAPRenée R. Jenkins MD FAAPProfessor of Pediatrics Howard UniversityProfessor of Pediatrics Howard University
President-Elect American Academy of Pediatrics President-Elect American Academy of Pediatrics
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Points of Emphasis
• American Academy of Pediatrics-AAP• Weight Issue Priorities for AAP
– Obesity Prevention in Childhood
• Obesity Risks and Management• Disordered Eating Risks and
Management• Supporting Child and Adolescent Well-
Being
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AAP Mission Attain optimal physical, Attain optimal physical,
mental, and social health mental, and social health
and well-being for all and well-being for all
infants, children, adole-infants, children, adole-
scents, and young adultsscents, and young adults. .
To accomplish this mission, To accomplish this mission,
the Academy shall support the Academy shall support
the professional needs of the professional needs of
its members.its members.
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AAP VisionChildren have optimal health and well-being and are valued by society. Academy members practice the highest quality health care and experience professional satisfaction and personal well-being.
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Percentage of children ages 6–17 who are overweight by gender,
selected years 1976–2004
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Resources for Patients & Families
• AAP overweight and obesity web
site (average 55K hits; 4K unique visitors PER MONTH)
• Books• Brochures
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For More Info: www.aap.org/obesity
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Referral
BMI Charts:Definitions
Boys: 2 to 20 years
BMI BMI
BMI BMI
• At risk of overweight: 85-95th BMI % for age
• Overweight:• > 95th BMI % for age
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Referral
BMI Charts: Why BMI?
• BMI body fatness• BMI = screening tool• Allows tracking of weight relative to height• Age-specific BMI values• Identify high risk patterns: –Rapid changes in BMI–Risk of complications
• Childhood BMI tracks into adulthood
Girls: 2 to 20 years
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Measurements: Age=4 y
Height=99.2 cm (39.2 in)
Weight=17.55 kg (38.6
lb)
Plotted BMI-for-Age
Girls: 2 to 20 years
BMI
BMI=17.8 =
85-95th percentile
“At risk for overweight”
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GG: School Aged Child
Girls: 2 to 20 years
BMI BMI
BMI BMI
BMI = 33.7 (190% of ideal, c/w severe o.w.)
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Health Effects of ObesityObesity increases the burden of
disease for children and adolescents– Cardiovascular disease
– Type 2 diabetes, DKA
– Polycystic ovarian syndrome
– Respiratory disease
– Slipped capital femoral epiphysis, Blount’s disease
– Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis
– Pseudotumor cerebri
– Depression, low self-esteem, decreased quality of life
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4 Components of Behavioral Strategies
• Clean up / Control the environment
– E.g. Eliminate sugar sweetened beverages from home; serve fruits & veg
• Teach self-monitoring behavior• Set achievable, specific goals “If you can’t count it you can’t change
it”• Rewarding successful behavioral
changeE.g. Praise, privileges, time w/ parents; food, $$$
Dietz & Robinson, NEJM, 2005
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ACTION Plan: Healthy People 2010 Objectives for Prevention
and Control of Childhood Obesity• 5 general goals • Goal #1: Increase daily physical activity among
children and adolescents. • Goal #2: Reduce the amount of time kids spend
watching television, video games, and the Internet. • Goal #3: Decrease the consumption of energy-dense,
high-sugar/high-fat foods like soda, ice cream, junk food, and fast food.
• Goal #4: Increase the consumption of nutritious foods like fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and skim milk.
• Goal #5: Create social, monetary, and policy-driven incentives that reinforce long-term environmental and behavioral change.
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How common are eating disorders?
• Estimates!!– Anorexia – 1% of population– Bulimia – 4%– Binge eating - 2%
• Outcomes for those affected– 60% get treated and recover– 20% get treated and partially recover– 20% of severely affected people not
treated die
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Disordered Eating Patterns Start Early
• 46% of 9-11 year olds are "sometimes" or "very often" on diets, and 82% of their families are "sometimes" or "very often" on diets (Gustafson-Larson & Terry, 1992).
• 35% of "normal dieters" progress to pathological dieting. Of those, 20-25% progress to partial or full-syndrome eating disorders. (Shisslak & Crago, 1995)
• 95% of all dieters will regain their lost weight in 1-5 years
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How do we define eating disorders?
• EATING DISORDERS include extreme emotions, attitude, and behavior surrounding weight and food issues experienced by both women and men. They include anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and binge eating disorder. All are serious emotional and physical problems that can have life-threatening consequences.
• ANOREXIA NERVOSA is characterized by self-starvation and excessive weight loss.
• BULIMIA NERVOSA is characterized by a secretive cycle of binge eating followed by purging. Bulimia includes eating large amounts of food-more than most people would eat in one meal- in short periods of time, then getting rid of the food and calories through vomiting, laxative abuse, or over-exercising.
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Less Common Disordered Eating
Syndromes• Binge eating disorder is characterized by consuming
large quantities of food in a very short period of time until the individual is uncomfortably full. Binge eating disorder is much like bulimia except the individuals do not use any form of purging (i.e. vomiting, laxatives, fasting, etc.) following a binge.
• Anorexia Athletica – compulsive exercising• Night Eating Syndrome- type of sleep disorder in
which people eat while seeming to be sound asleep.
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Complications of Anorexia Nervosa
• Medical– Emaciation including muscle wasting– Lowered pulse rate– Loss of menstrual cycle– Joint swelling
• Behavioral– Clinical depression– Anxiety and personality disorders
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Complications of Bulimia Nervosa
• Medical– Electrolyte imbalance risking cardiac arrest– Esophagitis– Tooth Enamel Erosion– Swelling of Salivary Glands
• Behavioral– Poor Coping Skills– Problems with Anxiety
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Treating Eating Disorders
• Requires the help of health professionals with expertise in managing these disorders– Pediatrician– Mental health professional– Nutritionist– Nurse
• Requires hospitalization when physical signs suggest medical risks
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America’s PromiseFive Promises:• Caring adults in their
lives• Safe places to live
and learn• A healthy start• Effective education• Opportunities to help
others
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Bright Futures: Optimal Preventive Care
• Building Effective Partnerships with child, family, health professional and community to promote health and prevent illiness– Supporting open communication– Identifying strengths of child and family– Identifying shared goals– Developing an action plan based on those
goals
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Thank You