The Effects of Being Overweight
Overweight children are at risk for serious health conditions like type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, and high cholesterol - all once
considered exclusively adult diseases. But overweight children may also
be prone to low self-esteem that stems from being teased, bullied, or
rejected by peers.
Overweight children are often the last to be chosen
as playmates, even as early as preschool. Children who are unhappy with
their weight may be more likely than average-weight children to develop
unhealthy dieting habits and eating disorders, such as anorexia nervosa
and bulimia, and they may be more prone to depression, as well as
substance abuse.
Overweight children are at risk of developing medical problems that
affect a child's present and future health and have direct impact on
quality of life including:
- high blood pressure, high cholesterol and abnormal blood lipid levels, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes
- shortness of breath that makes exercise, sports, or any physical
activity more difficult and may aggravate the symptoms or increase the
chances of developing asthma
- restless or disordered sleep patterns
- tendency to mature earlier (overweight kids may be taller and more
sexually mature than their peers, raising expectations that they should
act as old as they look, not as old as they are; overweight girls may
have irregular menstrual cycles and have fertility problems in
adulthood)
- liver and gall bladder disease
Risk factors present in childhood (including high blood pressure,
high cholesterol, and diabetes) can lead to serious adult medical
conditions like heart disease, heart failure, and stroke. Preventing or
treating obesity in children may reduce the risk of developing these
conditions as they get older.
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