The Signal

Study: Mom’s lifestyle affects kids’ obesity

- Brett Molina USA TODAY

Mothers who live a healthier lifestyle, following habits such as a good diet and regular exercise, can decrease the risk of raising an obese child, a study suggests.

The study led by Harvard University’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health found women who followed five healthy habits were 75 percent less likely to have an obese child than women who followed none of the habits.

Researcher­s analyzed data on 24,289 kids between the ages of 9 to 14 born to 16,945 women who had enrolled in two earlier, larger studies.

They focused on five habits: a highqualit­y diet, regular exercise, a healthy body mass index, no smoking, and light to moderate alcohol consumptio­n.

Results showed mothers who followed four of the five habits showed a lower risk of obesity among their kids, noting diet did not appear “significan­tly associated.”

Mothers who followed all five habits boasted a 75 percent lower risk for their kids becoming obese than mothers who followed none of those habits.

“Our study was the first to demonstrat­e that an overall healthy lifestyle really outweighs any individual healthy lifestyle factors followed by mothers when it comes to lowering the risk of obesity in their children,” Qi Sun, lead author of the study and assistant professor at Harvard’s Department of Nutrition, said in a statement.

Findings were published Wednesday in the journal BMJ.

A study published in November by the New England Journal of Medicine warned if current obesity trends continue, more than half of children and teens in the U.S. will be obese by age 35.

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