Family weight talks tied to dieting, laxative use

Family weight talks tied to dieting, laxative use

NEW YORK - Teens were more likely to diet and use other unhealthy measures to control their weight when their parents talked to them about losing weight or the importance of being thin, in a new study.

Conversely, family conversations about healthy eating that did not involve the topic of weight were linked to fewer unhealthy behaviours, such as laxative use and skipping meals - especially among heavier adolescents.

"It's important to (have) conversations that focus on healthy eating as a cause for healthy bodies and strong bones, rather than a cause for weight and size," said Jerica Berge, who led the new study at the University of Minnesota Medical School in Minneapolis.

Past studies have shown that being told to diet or being teased about weight by a parent is harmful to children, she said. But that still leaves the question of what families who genuinely want to help an overweight child should be talking about.

"They would always ask me, 'What do I say to my kid?'" Berge told Reuters Health.

She and her colleagues surveyed 2,800 racially and socioeconomically diverse middle and high school students and one or both of their parents about food, weight and related conversations.

Twenty-eight per cent of mothers of normal-weight teens said they'd talked about healthy eating with their child, and 33 per cent said they'd had conversations about weight or the need to lose weight.

That compared to 15 per cent of mothers who talked solely about healthy eating with their overweight teens and 60 per cent who discussed losing weight. Rates were similar for conversations initiated by fathers.

The researchers found that dieting and unhealthy eating patterns were more common among both normal weight and overweight children of parents who focused on weight.

For example, 64 per cent of overweight teens whose mothers talked about weight and weight loss had used worrisome weight-control behaviours. That compared to 41 per cent when family discussions were only about healthy eating and 53 per cent when mothers didn't discuss food or weight at all.

Likewise, 39 per cent of normal weight children whose mothers brought up weight had used unhealthy behaviours, compared to 30 per cent of those with mothers who emphasised being healthy, Berge's team reported Monday in JAMA Pediatrics.

"If a child is concerned about their weight and they want to talk about their weight, you want to have an open conversation with them," said Alison Field, who studies weight and unhealthy eating at Boston Children's Hospital but wasn't involved in the new research.

However to have that talk with a kid who doesn't really want to discuss weight probably won't be helpful, she told Reuters Health.

Because the surveys represent a single point in time, Berge and her colleagues couldn't determine whether family conversations or a teen's dieting and unhealthy weight-control behaviours came first.

Field said future studies will ideally follow teens who don't engage in any unhealthy weight-related behaviours to see how family talks about food affect who does and doesn't start.

Still, the researchers said, the findings suggest parents should stay away from conversations that focus on losing weight and being thin - and talk about the general importance of healthy eating instead.

"Healthy eating conversations are not going to be harmful, and they may be helpful," Field said.

"That to me is a positive message for parents who have an overweight kid and are struggling because they don't know what to do," Berge added.

"The best thing they can do is focus on a healthy message."

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