Oroville Mercury-Register

Childhood obesity in US accelerate­d

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A new study ties the COVID-19 pandemic to an “alarming” increase in obesity in U.S. children and teenagers.

Childhood obesity has been increasing for decades, but the new work suggests an accelerati­on last year — especially in those who already were obese when the pandemic started.

The results signal a “profound increase in weight gain for kids” and are “substantia­l and alarming,” said one of the study’s authors, Dr. Alyson Goodman of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

It’s also a sign of a vicious cycle. The pandemic appears to be worsening the nation’s longstandi­ng obesity epidemic, and obesity can put people at risk for more severe illness after coronaviru­s infection.

The CDC on Thursday released the study, which is the largest yet to look at

obesity trends during the pandemic. It found:

• An estimated 22% of children and teens were obese last August, up from 19% a year earlier.

• Before the pandemic, children who were a healthy weight were gaining an average of 3.4 pounds a year. That rose to 5.4 pounds during the pandemic.

• For kids who were moderately obese, expected weight gain rose from 6.5

pounds a year before the pandemic to 12 pounds after the pandemic began.

• For severely obese kids, expected annual weight gain went from 8.8 pounds to 14.6 pounds.

The rate of obesity increased most dramatical­ly in kids ages 6 to 11, who are more dependent on their parents and may have been more affected when schools suspended in-person classes, the researcher­s said.

The research was based on a review of the medical records of more than 432,000 kids and teens, ages of 2 to 19, who were weighed and measured at least twice before the pandemic and at least once early in the pandemic.

Some limitation­s: It only included children who got care before and during the pandemic, the researcher­s said. And it also did not offer a look at how obesity trends may have differed between racial and ethnic groups.

 ?? PATRICK SISON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A close-up of a beam scale in New York.
PATRICK SISON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A close-up of a beam scale in New York.

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