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Long Branch, N.J— As the
waist lines of America’s youth grow, so does the concern over
the number of children and adolescents who are considered obese.
Recent studies show that 10 to 15 percent of all 6- to 17-year-olds
are obese.
Malcolm S. Schwartz, D.O., a board certified osteopathic pediatric
endocrinologist and chief of pediatric endocrinology and diabetes
at The Children’s Hospital at Monmouth Medical Center in Long
Branch, N.J., addressed the American Osteopathic Association Convention
and Scientific Seminar in San Diego on Oct. 1, and explained how
parents schools and communities can help children stay fit.
“Even during pregnancy a mother can help her child by watching
her weight and maintaining a moderate exercise level,” said
Dr. Schwartz. Dr. Schwartz also recommends that families eat meals
together at a fixed time and place and not to eat in front of the
television.
This is not to say that influences outside the
family cannot help curb childhood obesity. Dr. Schwartz believes
that schools can help by educating children on appropriate diet
and lifestyle choices, eliminating cookie and candy sales as fundraisers
and installing more water fountains.
Dr. Schwartz also calls for mandating minimum
standards for physical education in schools and encouraging schools
to review the contents of vending machines for healthier choices.
“The need to end childhood obesity is
becoming more urgent as the onset of type 2 diabetes mellitus is
occurring at younger ages than ever before,” Dr. Schwartz
said. “Type 2 diabetes, which was typically diagnosed in patients
over the age of 40, has now been found more commonly in children
and adolescents. About 90 percent of patients who develop type 2
diabetes are obese.”
At The Center for Disorders of Insulin and Metabolism,
Dr. Schwartz and fellow pediatric endocrinologists Frank P. Barrows,
D.O., and Kirk Kerensky, M.D., manage the pediatric obesity program
at The Women’s & Children’s Specialty Center, Lakewood,
and The Children’s Hospital at Monmouth Medical Center in
Long Branch. The program provides a blame-free, supportive environment
to help obese children and their families adopt healthier lifestyles.
For more information, please call (732) 923-6085.
About The Children's Hospital at Monmouth
Medical Center
As a regional leader dedicated to children’s
health, The Children’s Hospital at Monmouth Medical Center
offers the highest level of pediatric care for newborns to adolescents,
including leading edge treatments and specialized expertise. More
than 130 pediatricians are affiliated with the Monmouth Medical
Center’s pediatric attending staff and more than half are
subspecialty trained. The Children’s Hospital has extensive
subspecialty outpatient services for children with chronic illnesses,
a Neonatal Intensive Care (NICU), part of Monmouth's state-designated
regional perinatal center, a Cystic Fibrosis Center and a Ronald
McDonald House. For a referral to a pediatrician or specialist,
please call 1-888-SBHS-123.
CONTACT: Beth Salamon
Public Relations
(973) 322-4926, esalamon@sbhcs.com
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Monmouth Medical Center
300 Second Avenue
Long Branch, New Jersey 07740
PHONE: (732) 222-5200
©2007 Saint Barnabas Health Care System
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