Compared to girls at a healthy weight, girls with obesity were 44
percent more likely to have depression or to be diagnosed with it in
the future, the analysis of 22 studies with a total of almost
144,000 participants found.
Just being overweight rather than obese, however, didn't appear to
influence the risk of depression for girls, and there wasn't any
association between weight and depression in boys.
The smaller studies included in the analysis were not controlled
experiments designed to prove whether or how obesity might cause
depression, or the role that gender might play. But it's possible
boys and girls might have different perceptions about body image
that at least partially explain the results, said lead author Dr.
Shailen Sutaria of Imperial College London in the UK.
"While a number of factors may be involved, clearly there are
additional social pressures on girls to be a certain body shape,
perpetuated and amplified though social media," Sutaria said by
email.
Girls who experience body dissatisfaction may develop symptoms of
depression as a result, Sutaria added. But overweight or obese boys
might think differently about their size.
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"Boys may find it desirable to be larger as this reflects strength
and dominance, traits that are likely to be desirable during
childhood," Sutaria said.
Globally, more than 40 million children are overweight or obese by
the time they're 5 years old, according to the World Health
Organization.
Depression is also a leading cause of reduced quality of life for
children, impacting school performance, friendships and the risk of
substance use and other risky behaviors, researchers note in the
Archives of Disease in Childhood.
While previous research has linked childhood obesity to an increased
risk of depression, results have been mixed and the estimated excess
risk has ranged from as low as 4 percent to as high as 64 percent,
researchers note.
In the current analysis, children were 14 years old on average and
almost 16 percent were obese. Slightly more than one in 10 obese
children were depressed.
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"We know that children with obesity are at risk of developing
depression and we know that children with depression are at risk of
developing obesity," said Dr. Stephen Pont, a researcher at the
University of Texas Dell Medical School in Austin who wasn't
involved in the study.
"To some degree we have been in a 'chicken and the egg' situation,"
Pont said by email. "We do not know if obesity causes depression or
that depression causes obesity."
Still, parents should keep the risk of depression in mind when they
try to encourage overweight or obese children to achieve a healthy
weight, said Rebecca Puhl of the Rudd Center for Food Policy &
Obesity at the University of Connecticut in Hartford.
That means avoiding talk about the scale, Puhl, who wasn't involved
in the study, said by email.
"When parents talk to their teen about losing weight, the teen is
more likely to turn to unhealthy dieting and maladaptive weight
control behaviors - like binge eating," Puhl added. "But when parent
conversations instead focus on healthy behaviors like eating
nutritious foods, rather than body weight, the teen is less likely
to engage in those unhealthy behaviors."
At home, parents should also make sure kids aren't teased about
their weight and that there's a supportive environment that
encourages healthy behavior, said Eleanor Mackey of Children's
National Health System in Washington, D.C.
"Parents should also encourage friendships that support the
adolescent without bullying," Mackey, who wasn't involved in the
study, said by email. "Finally, if a parent notices changes in mood,
attitude, or increase in sleeping, difficulty sleeping, poor
concentration, irritability, or sad mood, please seek help."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2vX1FMU Archives of Disease in Childhood,
online July 18, 2018.
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