NEW YORK: Fathers who get more involved in raising their children may be helping to lower their kids' risk of obesity, a U.S. study suggests. The study wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove whether or how fathers' involvement with kids directly impacts children's' odds of obesity. Even though some fathers got more involved in decision-making during the study, this didn't appear to influence kids' odds of obesity. "When fathers take children outside to play, they both experience the benefits of physical activity, which reduces the risk of obesity," Morgan said by email. Fathers' involvement in playtime may have many benefits for kids, noted Philip Morgan, a researcher at the University of Newcastle in Australia who wasn't involved in the study.
Community-wide intervention reduces obesity risk factors in preschoolers from low-income families
However, Obesity prevalence is two to three times higher in children from low-income families compared to higher-income counterparts. Solutions that can be scaled-up are urgently needed to prevent obesity in young children at highest risk." "Because obesity disproportionately affects lower-income families, incorporating WIC providers and community systems into multi-sector obesity prevention efforts could yield high results at a national level." The study- one of a trio of studies published today in Obesity- was designed to test a childhood obesity-prevention program known as the Massachusetts Childhood Obesity Research Demonstration (MA-CORD) initiative among families in low-income communities, where high obesity rates persist. At the end of the study, children from the intervention sites reduced their intake of sugary beverages and juice and got more sleep compared to children who did not receive the intervention.collected by :Lucy William
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