• Positive parenting can reduce the risk t

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Tue Feb 22 21:31:34 2022
    Positive parenting can reduce the risk that children develop obesity


    Date:
    February 22, 2022
    Source:
    Penn State
    Summary:
    New research found that children with positive, early interactions
    with their care givers -- characterized by warmth, responsiveness,
    and a stimulating home environment -- were at reduced risk of
    childhood obesity.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    New research from Penn State found that children with positive,
    early interactions with their care givers -- characterized by warmth, responsiveness, and a sitmulating home environment -- were at reduced
    risk of childhood obesity.


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    "A lot of the discussion around childhood obesity and other health risks focuses on identifying and studying the exposure to risk," said Brandi
    Rollins, assistant research professor of biobehavioral health. "We took
    a strength-based approach in our analysis. We found that a supportive
    family and environment early in a child's life may outweigh some of the cumulative risk factors that children can face." The study, "Family Psychosocial Assets, Child Behavioral Regulation, and Obesity," recently appeared in the journal Pediatrics. In the article, Rollins and Lori
    Francis, associate professor of biobehavioral health, analyzed data from
    over 1,000 mother-child pairs and found that children's early exposures
    to family psychosocial assets -- including a quality home environment, emotional warmth from the mother, and a child's ability to self-regulate
    -- reduced the risk of developing childhood obesity.

    Encouragingly, these factors were protective even when children faced
    familial risks for obesity, including poverty, maternal depression,
    or residence in a single-parent home.

    "Research on parenting has shown that these types of family assets
    influence children's behavior, academic success, career, and -- not surprisingly - - health," Rollins said. "It is significant that these
    factors also protect against childhood obesity because the family assets
    we studied are not food or diet-specific at all. It is heartening to know
    that, by providing a loving, safe environment, we can reduce the risk
    that children will develop obesity." Severe obesity Children are deemed
    to have obesity when their body mass indices (BMIs) are greater than 95%
    of other children their age and gender. There is a great deal of variance, however, in the BMIs of children who exceed the obesity threshold.

    Children whose BMI is 20% higher than the obesity threshold are considered
    to have severe obesity.



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    The researchers found that children who had early-onset severe obesity
    did not face greater levels of family risk than children who were not
    obese. Children with severe obesity, however, did have fewer family
    assets than children who were not obese or who displayed moderate levels
    of obesity. More research is needed to understand which factors contribute
    to the development of severe obesity and which factors reduce the risk.

    "Though the findings on severe obesity may seem discouraging, they offer
    some hope," Rollins explained. "Some risk factors, like household poverty,
    can be very difficult to change. Assets, on the other hand, may be easier
    to build.

    People can learn to parent responsively. It is encouraging that parenting really matters, that family matters." What parents can do This work
    is based on research in parenting and child development. Responsive
    parenting, one of the family assets measured in the study, involves
    responding to children in a timely, sensitive, and age-appropriate manner
    based on the child's presenting needs. Researchers in Penn State's Center
    for Childhood Obesity Research are also exploring how responsive parenting
    can reduce the risk of childhood obesity.

    This study focused on childhood obesity, but the researchers said
    that parents may improve many outcomes for their children by learning responsive-parenting skills. Knowledge of responsive-parenting skills,
    however, may not lead directly to implementing those skills in the home.

    "No one can read a pamphlet about cars and suddenly expect to drive," said Rollins. "Driving is a skill that requires education and practice. The
    same is true of responsive parenting.

    "Public health professionals, clinicians, and researchers
    must collaborate to help families develop psychosocial assets,
    including responsive parenting and a structured home environment,"
    she continued. "This could improve childhood obesity rates and other
    important quality-of-life outcomes." special promotion Get a free
    digital "Metabolism Myths" issue of New Scientist and discover the 7
    things we always get wrong about diet and exercise. Claim_yours_now_>>> ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Penn_State. Original written by
    Aaron Wagner. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Brandi Y. Rollins, Lori A. Francis, Nathaniel R. Riggs. Family
    Psychosocial Assets, Child Behavioral Regulation, and Obesity.

    Pediatrics, 2022; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2021-052918 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/02/220222135155.htm

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