Peers weigh heavily on heavy children

23 September 2011 - 11:45 By Reuters
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Child on a scale. File photo.
Child on a scale. File photo.
Image: Gallo Images/Thinkstock

Children who are heavier than their peers at ages four and five are more likely to struggle in their relationships with other children several years later, according to an Australian study. 

Researchers led by Michael Sawyer, a professor at the University of Adelaide, followed more than 3300 children for about four years and found that heavy children were up to 20% more likely at age eight or nine to be described by their parents as having social difficulties, and their teachers as having emotional problems.     

“The quality of peer relationships during this period of time has the potential to have a significant impact on children’s later mental health,” Sawyer wrote in an email to Reuters Health.     

For the study, published in Pediatrics, researchers surveyed the parents of 3363 Australian children participating in a large national health study. The interviews were conducted when the children were four or five, and again four years later.     

Questions involved measures of children’s mental and behavioral health, such as emotional problems, hyperactivity and social skills. Children also had their weight and height checked at each age.     

At ages four and five, 222 boys (13 percent) and 264 girls(16 percent) were determined to be overweight, while 77 boys (4,5 percent) and 87 girls (5,2 percent) were obese.     

Those children with a body mass index — BMI, a measure of weight relative to height — at least 1,6 points greater than their normal-weight peers at a young age were more at risk of having social problems, including isolation or teasing, later on.     

At ages eight and nine, the heavier children were 15% more likely to receive an evaluation of “concerning,” based on teachers’ and parents’ responses about social interactions with their peers. The heavy children were also 20% more likely to get a “concerning” score from teachers on emotional development.     

“It’s interesting that we’re seeing these problems at an early age,” said Christina Calamaro, a professor at the University of Maryland School of Nursing, who did not take part in the study.

“I think this speaks to the fact that health care providers need to take weight into consideration at an earlier age, so we can cut it off at the pass before they hit middle school.”

The study authors wrote that the stigma of being overweight can translate into social struggles for these children, and the children might withdraw themselves from social activities because they fear teasing. Obese children are also more likely to be bullied.     

Sawyer’s group did not find any differences between the heavy children and the normal weight children in their risk of mental health problems, such as hyperactivity or conduct disorders.     

Other studies have found that later in life, however, obesity puts adults at greater risk of developing a mental illness such as depression or anxiety.     

Sawyer said he’d like to continue following the children to see whether the social problems his study revealed might be precursors to later mental health problems.     

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