The National - News

UAE PARENTS UNAWARE OF THE OBESITY THREAT TO CHILDREN

Survey says one in five has no idea how body mass relates to health

- NICK WEBSTER

Parents in the UAE are sleepwalki­ng into an obesity crisis and 87 per cent do not realise diet has an effect on their child’s body mass index, a survey has found.

Research by King’s College Hospital, London in the UAE discovered one in five parents did not know what a BMI measuremen­t was, or that it is a key indicator of childhood obesity.

Just 140 of the 500 parents surveyed knew their child’s BMI, of whom 72 per cent said their child had a healthy weight for their age, with 28 per cent of parents admitting their child had an unhealthy weight.

Experts asked 500 men and women from background­s including UAE nationals, as well as Arab, Asian and western expatriate­s. All were married with children up to 10 years of age.

Dr Gowri Ramanathan, acting chief medical officer at King’s College Hospital, said “BMI blindness” was a dangerous precursor to rising childhood obesity.

“We don’t know the full scale of the problem of BMI blindness globally or locally, but this study indicates that some parents struggle with the concept of unhealthy BMI or how to recognise the early signs that a child is overweight,” Dr Ramanathan said.

“Often parents mistake the early signs that a child is overweight for so-called ‘puppy fat’, which is the fat children sometimes have.

“This fat is known to disappear as children grow, usually by the ages of 10 or 11. If not properly identified, what could appear as cute ‘puppy fat’ can impair their health later in life.”

More than three quarters of parents with children aged 1117 did not think overweight children were more at risk from obesity in adulthood.

Of the 500 surveyed parents, only 15 per cent were aware that a child’s puppy fat converts into real weight by the ages of 10 or 11.

Forty-two per cent of parents surveyed said they did not have a trusted regular family doctor that they could turn to for advice, citing reasons such as not having found one they liked or trusted, or that they would rather directly visit a specialist.

“The study helps to show where increased awareness is needed,” said Neil Buckley, chief executive of King’s College Hospital London in the UAE.

“The objective of studies like this is absolutely not to place the blame on parents, but to understand where the gaps lie and how we can help parents face those challenges best.”

There are more than 41 million overweight or obese children worldwide, and it is estimated the epidemic will reach 70 million children by 2025.

In the UAE, curbing the rising prevalence of child obesity is one of the top priorities of government authoritie­s, healthcare providers and insurers.

Internatio­nal experts have been in Abu Dhabi this week, attending workshops alongside government department heads at the Childhood Obesity Forum to help develop a clear strategy in the UAE to help reduce the average child’s BMI by 15 per cent before 2020.

“Healthy choices should be encouraged for diet and exercise together, but personal responsibi­lity is important,” said Dr Omniyat Al Hajri, director of the public health division at the Department of Health Abu Dhabi.

“We will be working in collaborat­ion with Adek, the KHDA, Abu Dhabi Food Control Authority and municipali­ties to ensure we are working together on the same message. People need to have access to healthy cities.

“It is a similar problem to how attitudes towards smoking have changed.

“We are living the same trend now with fast food, but we have more knowledge now to make better, more informed choices.

“The biggest challenge is reaching out to children in a language they understand and appreciate.

“They often don’t want to be told what to do, they must want to make these choices for themselves and that starts with their education.”

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