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Study: Excess Calorie Consumption Not the Only Factor in Childhood Obesity

2 min read

By Jim Greene

A new study found that calorie consumption rates in obese boys and girls were lower than those seen in boys and girls with healthy body weights. The study tracked sample groups consisting of 12- to 14-year old girls and 15- to 17-year old boys, separating them into control groups of “very obese” and “obese” children, and children with healthy body weights.

Very obese girls consumed, on average, about 300 calories less than obese girls each day, and obese girls ate about 110 fewer calories than girls with healthy body weights.

Obese boys consumed 220 calories less than overweight boys, and overweight boys ate an average of 375 fewer calories than boys with healthy body weights.

Researchers chalked up the surprising findings to mounting evidence that calorie consumption alone is not the only factor in childhood obesity:

“For older children and teenagers, increasing involvement in physical activity may be more important to weight and health than is their child’s diet,” said study researcher Asheley Cockrell Skinner, an assistant professor of health policy and pediatrics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “Parents of all children should aim for a healthy diet, but don’t assume that overweight children are eating any worse than their peers,” she said.

Source: Fox News

Jim Greene

Contributor

Jim has spent the last 5 years writing for a variety of health-related websites. At Activebeat, James is an essential member of the editorial team, providing information on exercise, diet & nutrition and men’s health – among many other things.

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