New Straits Times

Child’s obesity risk influenced by both parents

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A NEW study suggests that it is not only a mother’s weight which can impact her child’s health, with researcher­s in Singapore finding that children with obese fathers are also more likely to be obese themselves.

A team of researcher­s from the A*STAR Singapore Institute for Clinical Sciences followed 1,247 women during pregnancy to look at how various risk factors combined can influence a child’s risk of obesity.

It is already known that the period between conception and a child’s second birthday is crucial in determinin­g his or her future risk of obesity; however previous studies which have identified several risk factors for it during this window have mainly looked at them only in isolation.

For the new research the team looked at six of these risk factors: Mother overweight/obese (body mass index (BMI) greater than or equal to 25); father overweight/obese; excessive weight gain during pregnancy; raised blood glucose during pregnancy; breastfeed­ing for less than four months; and introducin­g solid food before four months.

In addition to monitoring the women during their pregnancy, the team also looked at the children when they were 4 years old, assessing measures of excess weight and obesity including BMI, waistto-height A new study suggests that children of mothers and fathers who are obese are more likely to also be overweight.

ratio, sum of skinfolds, and fat mass index which, unlike BMI, is the measuremen­t of how much fat, not weight, a person has relative to their height.

The team found that the more risk

factors parents had, the more likely their child was to be overweight or obese, with children from families with four or more risk factors 11 times more likely to be overweight when compared to children whose families had no risk factors.

The strongest risk factor was the parents’ weight, with the team finding that perhaps surprising­ly, the weight of both mothers and fathers made an equal contributi­on to the risk of a child being obese.

The second strongest risk factor was pregnancy weight gain, followed by breastfeed­ing duration, timing of solid food introducti­on, and lastly maternal glucose levels.

“If either the mum or the dad was overweight, the contributi­on was similar, but if both parents were overweight, the probabilit­y of the child being overweight doubled,” commented study author Izzuddin Mohd Aris, with the team adding that although fathers could be transmitti­ng genetic, or epigenetic factors that influence obesity risk, a father’s weight could also be an indicator of the family’s diet and exercise levels.

“The most important thing is that all these risk factors are modifiable,” says Aris. “Targeting only one of them will have a limited impact, but if we can target them in tandem then we should be able to reduce the risk of obesity even further.”

The results can be found published online in the

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