April 8, 2009 12:21 PM

Study: 1 In 5 Preschoolers Obese

(AP)  A striking new study says almost 1 in 5 American 4-year-olds is obese, and the rate is alarmingly higher among American Indian children, with nearly a third of them obese.

Researchers were surprised to see differences by race at so early an age.

Overall, more than half a million 4-year-olds are obese, the study suggests. Obesity is more common in Hispanic and black youngsters, too, but the disparity is most startling in American Indians, whose rate is almost double that of whites.

The lead author said that rate is worrisome among children so young, even in a population at higher risk for obesity because of other health problems and economic disadvantages.

"The magnitude of these differences was larger than we expected, and it is surprising to see differences by racial groups present so early in childhood," said Sarah Anderson, an Ohio State University public health researcher. She conducted the research with Temple University's Dr. Robert Whitaker.

Dr. Glenn Flores, a pediatrics and public health professor at University of Texas Southwestern Medical School in Dallas, said the research is an important contribution to studies documenting racial and ethnic disparities in children's weight.

"The cumulative evidence is alarming because within just a few decades, America will become a 'minority majority' nation," he said. Without interventions, the next generation "will be at very high risk" for heart disease, high blood pressure, cancers, joint diseases and other problems connected with obesity, said Flores, who was not involved in the new research.

The study is an analysis of nationally representative height and weight data on 8,550 preschoolers born in 2001. Children were measured in their homes and were part of a study conducted by the government's National Center on Educational Statistics. The results appear in Monday's Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine.

Almost 13 percent of Asian children were obese, along with 16 percent of whites, almost 21 percent of blacks, 22 percent of Hispanics, and 31 percent of American Indians.

Some previous studies of young children did not distinguish between kids who were merely overweight versus obese, or they examined fewer racial groups.

The current study looked only at obesity and a specific age group. Anderson called it the first analysis of national obesity rates in preschool kids in the five ethnic or racial groups.

The researchers did not examine reasons for the disparities, but others offered several theories.

Flores cited higher rates of diabetes in American Indians, and also Hispanics, which scientists believe may be due to genetic differences.

Also, other factors that can increase obesity risks tend to be more common among minorities, including poverty, less educated parents, and diets high in fat and calories, Flores said.

Jessica Burger, a member of the Little River Ottawa tribe and health director of a tribal clinic in Manistee, Mich., said many children at her clinic are overweight or obese, including preschoolers.

Burger, a nurse, said one culprit is gestational diabetes, which occurs during a mother's pregnancy. That increases children's chances of becoming overweight and is almost twice as common in American Indian women, compared with whites.

She also blamed the federal commodity program for low-income people that many American Indian families receive. The offerings include lots of pastas, rice and other high-carbohydrate foods that contribute to what Burger said is often called a "commod bod."

"When that's the predominant dietary base in a household without access to fresh fruits and vegetables, that really creates a better chance of a person becoming obese," she said.

Also, Burger noted that exercise is not a priority in many American Indian families struggling to make ends meet, with parents feeling stressed just to provide basic necessities.

To address the problem, her clinic has created activities for young Indian children, including summer camps and a winter break "outdoor day" that had kids braving 8-degree temperatures to play games including "snowsnake." That's a traditional American Indian contest in which players throw long, carved wooden "snakes" along a snow or ice trail to see whose lands the farthest.

The hope is that giving kids used to modern sedentary ways a taste of a more active traditional American Indian lifestyle will help them adopt healthier habits, she said.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by andie52 April 10, 2009 12:50 PM EDT
Hi honestabe8

I think we have agreed on quite a few subjects. Just not the you know what one.
Reply to this comment
by honestabe8 April 10, 2009 12:12 PM EDT
andie52...i knew if i read your post religiously, i would come upon something we agree on.
Reply to this comment
by andie52 April 10, 2009 11:28 AM EDT
I have seldom if ever seen obese child who didn?t have obese parents.
Follow ( figuratively) the grocery shopping cart and it isn?t difficult to figure out why so many people are overweight.
Reply to this comment
by lloydbest1 April 9, 2009 7:22 PM EDT
Posted by wake_up_folks at 6:44 AM : Apr 7, 2009

Don't be so sure of yourself.
Of all the groups represented in the study who do you think has, historically, had the most difficult time obtaining a dependable supply of food? Not the Blacks; even in Africa, there was plenty to hunt and gather. Not the whites who have always eaten comparatively well in this country and other than the occassional famine (Irish potato in 1845) have eaten well in Europe for centuries.
American aborigines have had a 12000 year history of training and forced selection for traits that maximise the storage of fat and use what calories they do consume as efficiently as possible. Other than those living on the Pacific coast south of the Alaskan Panhandle, very few Native groups ever had a culture of excess; the prospect of famine hung like a cloud over nearly every one of them and nearly all of the time. You can't beat a demon like that the way they did without adapting yourself to use food as efficiently as possible and store as much as you can as fat.
I lived in an all-native community (Whiteriver AZ; San Carlos Apache) for nearly a year back in the seventies and I still remember my friends gaining weight on the same diet - calorie for calorie - that I lost weight on. And the next leanest dude out weighed me by 25 pounds. We were similarly active as well.
I agree the diets of the 21st century First American is typically abysmal, and you only need to take a superficial glance at the census data to note that Original Americans are among the poorest people in our society. These are absolutely factors and there is a lot that can be done culture-wise to reduce obsity incidence among Natives as well as others but it is just as unwise to say that inherent characteristics, acquired over twelve millenia of almost unimaginably austere living, have no effect as it is to say that genetics is the whole story.
Reply to this comment
by honestabe8 April 8, 2009 8:40 AM EDT
On a positive not, fat kids ARE harder to kidnap.
Posted by LawyersGuns-n-Money at 7:23 AM : Apr 7, 2009

I witnessed a kid napping once...right on the couch
Reply to this comment
by wake_up_folks April 7, 2009 9:44 AM EDT
It has to do with genetics and the fact that Native Americans' bodies handle carbohydrates differently, less efficiently.
Posted by krzeaz at 3:25 AM : Apr 7, 2009

You don't have a clue what you're talking about.......it has nothing to do with genetics....it has everything to do with poor diets and poverty. What exactly do you base such a ridiculous comment on??
Reading these forums reinforces the fact that they are too many clueless people out there.....stupid people shouldn't be allowed to breed!
Reply to this comment
by honestabe8 April 7, 2009 9:37 AM EDT
Perhaps we should be feeding the little tykes some more Burger Burger, with a side order of Coronary Heart Disease.
Reply to this comment
by krzeaz April 7, 2009 6:25 AM EDT
It has to do with genetics and the fact that Native Americans' bodies handle carbohydrates differently, less efficiently.
Reply to this comment
by formrusmcsgt April 6, 2009 10:43 PM EDT
A striking new study says almost 1 in 5 American 4-year-olds is obese...
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Their parents should be in jail for neglect.
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