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Doctors don't speak up about obesity

Less than one-quarter of American parents with an overweight child remember ever being told by a health care professional that this was the case, a new study says.

"Parents might be more motivated to follow healthy eating and activity advice if they knew their children were overweight, but very few parents of overweight children say they have ever heard that from their doctor," lead author Dr Eliana Perrin, an associate professor in the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine and a paediatrician at North Carolina Children's Hospital, said in a university news release.

"As health care providers, it's our job to screen for overweight and obesity and communicate those screening results in sensitive ways, and we are clearly either not doing it or not doing it in a way that families can hear or remember. While we've done better in recent years, clearly there's more work to be done," she added.

The studies results

Perrin and colleagues analyzed federal government data collected on nearly 5 000 overweight children aged two to 15 between 1999 to 2008. During that time, 22% of parents said a doctor or other health care professional told them their child was overweight.

This percentage did increase from 19.4% in 1999 to 23.4% in 2004 and 29.1% in by 2008.

Among parents with obese children, only 58% recalled a doctor telling them that their child was obese.

The study appeared online in the journal Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine.

"We need to figure out two things: how much does communication of weight status influence parents' behaviours? And, if hearing that their children are overweight is as big a wake-up call to changing lifestyle as we know from some other small studies, we need to figure out where this communication is breaking down so we can do better in the future," Perrin said.


(Copyright © 2011 HealthDay. All rights reserved.)

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