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A boy cries as he recuperates after surgery during "Operation Smile" at a hospital in Manila's Makati financial district October 26, 2009. Operation Smile aim to provide free surgery for about a hundred children inflicted with cleft lips, cleft palates, and other facial deformities over a period of five days in Makati.  REUTERS/Cheryl Ravelo

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    Program for parents improves kids' lifestyle

    Thu Oct 30, 2008 1:25pm EDT

    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Educating parents on healthy lifestyle may help get their overweight children off the couch and moving more, a small study suggests.

    Health

    In a pilot study testing a program called Families for Health, UK researchers found benefits for both children and their parents. The children, who were all overweight or obese at the study's start, became less sedentary and managed to lose some weight.

    Their parents, meanwhile, reported improvements in their relationships with their children, and in their own mental well-being.

    The success suggests that the program should now be tested in a larger study, the researchers report in the journal Archives of Disease in Childhood.

    The findings also highlight the importance of the parent-child relationship in combating childhood obesity, according to the researchers, led by Wendy Robertson of Warwick Medical School in Coventry.

    The Families for Health program differs from other childhood obesity programs currently being researched in the UK in its emphasis on parenting and relationship skills, the researchers write.

    The 21 families in the study attended weekly sessions at a community center over 12 weeks. The children, who ranged in age from 7 to 13, played games that kept them physically active, learned about healthy eating and had time to discuss the "emotional aspects" of their lives with each other -- including any problems they faced in dealing with their weight.

    Parents learned how to encourage healthy eating in a positive way -- by filling the kitchen with healthy food choices and improving their own diets, for example. They were also taught how to consistently enforce family rules and build their children's self-esteem.

    At the end of the 3-month program, the children's average body mass index (BMI) had dipped and they were more active in their daily lives -- as measured by a step counter the children wore over one week. They were also eating less junk food.

    The improvements were still present 6 months later, Robertson and her colleagues found.

    The researchers are continuing to follow the group, looking at whether the program still makes a difference after two years.

    "Giving parents the main responsibility for the behavior change in the family," they note, "is central to the success of the Families for Health pilot and may enhance long term sustainability."

    SOURCE: Archives of Disease in Childhood, November 2008.



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