Childhood Obesity Research Paper

Words: 948
Pages: 4

Childhood obesity is a growing concern throughout the world. Obesity is a health concern, where one eats too much. During early ages of adolescence they seem to not care for what they are eating but rather want to eat just to eat regardless of it being healthy or unhealthy. Being obese causes risk for cardiovascular disease and increase the chances of morbidity and mortality. Children regardless of their gender, race, or skin color are at a high risk of being obese in modern society as unhealthy food is portrayed on television to hundreds of millions of children on a daily basis to be good for you. “The prevalence of obesity has remained fairly stable at about 17% and affects about 12.7 million children and adolescents. [1]” This shows 17 …show more content…
With these kids being obese once they grow older they will also increase the obese rate in adults. America’s parents are ignorant on these obese children as can be seen when these parents feed their children all of the unhealthy foods such as chips, pizza, hamburgers and other junk food. Eating junk food is not bad at all, but eating it at an excess is very unhealthy for anyone. You can see professional weightlifter and athletes eating an occasional “cheat meal” where they eat whatever they want during a certain period of time. This shows moderation, where children are able to eat an occasional junk food to please their taste buds. According to Core concepts of Health 14th edition, obese people will likely face complications associated with obesity, “Obese people have an increased risk of death from all causes compared with people of normal weight. Obesity is associated with diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, many kinds of cancer, impaired immune function, gallbladder and kidney diseases, skin problems, impotence, sleep and breathing dis-orders, back pain, arthritis, and other bone and joint disor-ders. Obesity is also associated with complications of pregnancy, menstrual irregularities, urine leakage (stress in-continence), increased surgical risk, and psychological disor-ders and problems (such as depression, low self-esteem, and body dissatisfaction).