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HEALTHY
EATING AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY habits are key to your child's
well-being. Eating too much and exercising too little can
lead to overweight and related health problems that can
follow children into adult years. You can take an active
role in helping your child-and your whole family-learn healthy
eating and physical activity habits that may last for a
lifetime.
Is
my child overweight?
Because
children grow at different rates at different times, it
is not always easy to tell if a child is overweight. If
you think that your child is overweight, talk to your health
care provider. Your health care provider can measure your
child's height and weight and tell you if your child is
in a healthy range.
How
can I help my overweight child?
Do not put your child on a weight-loss diet unless your
health care provider tells you to. If children do not eat
enough, they may not grow and learn as well as they should.
| Involve
the whole family in building healthy eating and physical
activity habits. It benefits everyone and does not single
out the child who is overweight. Try to: |
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Be supportive |
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Encourage
healthy eating habits |
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Encourage
daily physical activity |
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Discourage
inactive pastimes |
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Be a positive role model. |
| Be
supportive |
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Tell
your child that he or she is loved, is special, and
is important. Children's feelings about themselves often
are based on their parents' feelings about them.
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Accept
your child at any weight. Children will be more likely
to accept and feel good about themselves when their
parents accept them.
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Listen
to your child's concerns about his or her weight. Overweight
children probably know better than anyone else that
they have a weight problem. For this reason, overweight
children need support, acceptance, and encouragement
from parents.
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| Encourage
healthy eating habits |
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Buy
and serve more fruits and vegetables (fresh, frozen,
or canned). Let your child choose them at the store.
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Skip
buying soft drinks and high fat/high calorie snack foods
like chips, cookies, and candy. If children do not see
these foods at home, they will be less likely to ask
for them and you will not have to say "no."
Choose healthy snack foods.
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Eat
breakfast every day. Skipping breakfast can leave your
child hungry, tired, and looking for less healthy foods
later in the day.
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Plan
healthy meals and eat together as a family. Planning
the week's meals and grocery shopping can help save
you time and money. Sitting together at meal times helps
children learn to enjoy a variety of foods.
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Eat
fast food less often. When you visit a fast food restaurant,
take advantage of the healthful options offered.
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Here
are more tips to encourage healthy eating habits:
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Do
not get discouraged if your child will not eat a new
food the first time it is served. Some kids will need
to have a new food served to them 10 times or more before
they will eat it.
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Try
not to use food as a reward when encouraging kids to
eat. Promising dessert to a child for eating vegetables,
for example, sends the message that vegetables are less
valuable than dessert. Kids learn to dislike foods they
think are less valuable.
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Do
not try to control the amount of food your child eats.
It is up to you to provide your child with healthy meals
and snacks, but your child should be allowed to choose
how much food he or she will eat.
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| Healthy
snack foods for your child to try |
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Fresh
fruit |
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Fruit
canned in juice or light syrup, such as mandarin oranges,
peaches, or pineapples |
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Small
amounts of dried fruits such as raisins, apple rings,
or apricots |
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Fresh
vegetables such as baby carrots, cucumber, zucchini,
or tomatoes cut and served with low-fat salad dressing
for dipping |
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Reduced
fat cheese served with whole-wheat crackers |
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Low-fat
yogurt with fruit |
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Bagel
spread with small amount of peanut butter |
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Graham
crackers, animal crackers, or low-fat vanilla wafers |
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Tortilla
spread with low-fat refried beans |
Foods that are small, round, sticky, or hard to chew, such
as raisins, whole grapes, hard vegetables, hard chunks of
cheese, nuts, seeds, and popcorn can cause choking. These
foods are not good choices for preschool age children.
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Encourage
daily physical activity
Fun physical activities for your child to
try:
Riding
a bike
Climbing on a jungle-gym
Swinging on a swing set
Jumping rope
Playing hopscotch
Bouncing a ball
Like
adults, kids need daily physical activity. Here are
some ways to help your child move every day:
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When
appropriate and safe, let your child walk places such
as to school, the store, or to friends' houses.
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Encourage
your child to take physical education (PE) class at
school, if available.
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Encourage
your child to join a sports team or class, such as soccer,
dance, basketball, or gymnastics.
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Be
active together as a family. Assign active chores such
as making the beds, washing the car, or vacuuming. Plan
active outings such as a trip to the zoo or a walk through
a local park.
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Because
his or her body is not ready yet, do not encourage
your pre-adolescent child to participate in adult-style
physical activity such as long jogs, using an exercise
bike or treadmill, or lifting heavy weights. FUN physical
activities are best for kids.
Kids need a total of about 60 minutes of physical
activity a day, but this does not have to be all at
one time. Short 10- or even 5-minute bouts of activity
throughout the day are just as good.
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| Discourage
inactive pastimes |
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Set
limits on the amount of time your family spends watching
TV and videos, and playing video games.
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Help
your child find FUN things to do besides watching TV.
Your child may find that creative play is more interesting
than television.
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Read
together instead of watching TV. Read at home or volunteer
to read to others. Read to adults and children at your
local hospital or sign up to help people learn to read.
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Encourage
your child to get up and move during commercials and
discourage snacking when the TV is on.
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| Fun
things for you and your child to do besides watching
TV |
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Take turns acting out favorite books or stories,
or singing along to favorite songs. Use old clothes
for costumes.
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Make
instruments out of kitchen items and dance to the
music you make. Shake a jar filled with macaroni and
beat on a plastic bowl with wooden spoons.
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Play
schoolyard games at home. Make a hopscotch on the
floor with masking tape, play follow-the-leader or "Simon
says," and toss balls into a basket.
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Do
a family art project. Trace cookie cutters on paper,
make masks out of paper bags, design a paper airplane,
or cut and glue pictures to a piece of paper.
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Go
camping at home. Make a tent by putting a sheet
over a table or use a big box as a tent, make a sleeping
bag from a blanket, and sing "campfire" songs.
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Be
a positive role model
Children are good learners and they learn what they see. Choose
healthy foods and active pastimes for yourself. Your children
will see that they can follow healthy habits that last for
the rest of their lives.
Find more help
Your health care provider
Ask your health care provider for brochures, booklets, or
other informational materials about healthy eating, physical
activity, and weight control. Your health care provider may
be able to refer you to other health care professionals who
work with overweight children, such as registered dietitians,
psychologists, and exercise physiologists.

Your local library
Ask a librarian to help you locate books about weight control
for children. Books should be written by a health professional
and should encourage the whole family to build healthy eating
and physical activity habits. Avoid books that promise quick
results or encourage fad diets.
Many libraries sponsor talks about a variety of topics,
including health. Ask a librarian if any talks about healthy
eating, physical activity, or weight control for children
are scheduled.
County
extension office
Locate the cooperative extension office for your county by
looking in the government section of your phone book under
the name of your county. Your extension office may offer free
or low-cost materials or classes in cooking and nutrition.
Your local recreation center or community
center
Sign up for physical activity classes or programs for families
or children.
Weight-control
program
You may want to think about a treatment program if: |
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You
have changed your family's eating and physical activity
habits and your child has not reached a healthy weight.
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Your
health care provider has told you that your child's
health or emotional well-being is at risk because of
his or her weight.
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To
locate a weight-control program for your child, you
may wish to contact your local hospital, university,
or college.
The overall goal of a treatment program should be
to help your whole family adopt healthy eating and
physical activity habits that you can keep up for
the rest of your lives. Here are some other things
a weight-control program should do:
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Include
a variety of health care professionals on staff: doctors,
RDs, psychiatrists or psychologists, and/or exercise
physiologists.
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Evaluate
your child's weight, growth, and health before enrolling
in the program and watch these factors while enrolled.
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Adapt
to the specific age and abilities of your child. Programs
for 4-year-olds should be different from those for 12-year-olds.
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Help
your family keep up healthy eating and physical activity
behaviors after the program ends.
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Source
from Weight-control Information Network, http://www.niddk.nih.gov/
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This health article is made available by Dr. Rel Gray, MD a Weight Loss Doctor. Gray Clinic's office at 206 E. Reynolds Drive # C2 Ruston, LA 71270. Dr. Gray is easy reachable from Bernice, Downsville, Farmerville, Calhoun, Choudrant, Dubach, Grambling, Ruston, Simsboro, Eros, Hodge, Jonesboro, Quitman, Athens, Lisbon, Arcadia, Bienville, and Gibsland.
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STATE
OF THE ART WEIGHT LOSS
ONE PATIENT AT A TIME |
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