Overweight parents more likely to have overweight children — but gender and age matter too

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weight, weighing scale

Among boys aged five years or under, the likelihood of being overweight was 19.8 percentage points higher when both parents were overweight and 26.7 points higher when both parents were obese. Image: vadimguzhva/Istock.com

Children whose parents are overweight have a higher chance of being overweight themselves, concludes a study from City, University of London, to be published in the Journal for Economics and Human Biology.

The new research analyzed data from a statistical study on the health of 14,401 families living in England, who were monitored between 1995 and 2009. The ages of participating children ranged from zero to 16 years; they were categorised as pre-school (birth up to five years), primary school (ages six to 11) and teenagers (ages 12-16).

Basing their investigation on body mass index (BMI), as well as on aspects of the parents’ daily lives (tobacco and alcohol consumption, socio-economic situation, mental health, etc.), the study authors concluded that parental influences may play an important role in children’s weight, and that children’s risk of obesity is closely linked to their age and gender.

For instance, among boys aged five years or under, the probability of being overweight is 19.8 percentage points higher when both parents are overweight and 26.7 points higher when both parents are obese.

Male and female school age children with an overweight or obese mother had a higher chance of being overweight when compared to the influence of the weight of their father. For example, for school-age female children, having an overweight or obese mother increases their likelihood of being overweight or obese, and female teenagers with obese mothers were also more likely to be overweight or obese.

The results also indicated that the age gap between parents and children (especially relating to mothers’ ages) may influence children’s weight: the wider the gap, the more children are at risk of being overweight, and this especially applies to girls.

As to possible explanations for parental influence on children’s risk factors, the authors highlighted the impact of diet, especially fruit and vegetable consumption, and physical activity. They added that children align their behaviors with those of their parents, notably in terms of exercise and what they eat, and that these behaviors are largely gender-specific.

Socio-economic factors also play a big role. “We find that lower income parents are more at risk of being overweight, and so are their children. Hence, interventions should focus more on lower income families to be more effective,” noted study author Professor Mireia Jofre-Bonet, from City’s Department of Economics.

According to estimates from the International Association for the Study of Obesity (IASO), the United Kingdom has the highest prevalence of obese and overweight children in the age group of 5-17 years in Europe. NVG

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