Contrary to popular belief that a child’s obesity
risk is more determined by their parent’s weight, it could be true that
siblings have more of an impact on their brother’s or sister’s chance
of becoming obese. This is according to the findings of a new study
carried out in the US.
The research analysed information extracted from the national Family
Habits Survey, finding that kids with obese siblings were five times
more likely to be obese themselves, whereas children with obese parents
were only twice as likely to also be obese.
“When you look at a two-child family, a
child’s obesity status was more strongly related with their sibling than
with their parent,” commented Mark Pachucki, a researcher with the
Mongan Institute for Health Policy at Massachusetts General Hospital in
Boston, and leader of the research.
According to the NHS, you are considered obese if you have a body
mass index (BMI) reading of between 30 and 39.9. Becoming obese is
basically the result of a calorie imbalance; gaining a large amount of
weight from taking in more calories through your diet than you are
burning from physical activity. However, the risk can increase through a
combination of different factors such as genetics, the environment and
lifestyle choices.
Previous research has found links between parent’s obesity and their
children’s weight, but there has been little in the way of assessing the
role of the weight of one sibling effecting the other’s obesity risk.
“This is really the first project to come out the bigger study, in
which we are actually merging about 10 years of families’ food purchases
with information about their health,” Pachucki said.
The research comprised of 1,948 families – 807 families with two
children and 1,141 with just a single child. Eating and exercising were
looked at, in addition to height and weight data to determine who was
obese.
Around 12% of the only children could be classified as obese, with
nearly a fifth not being physically active and over a third consuming
fast food on two or more occasions each week.
A similar pattern emerged for those households with two children, but
only 8% of the elder children could be classified as obese, in
comparison to 12% of their younger brother or sister.
“We looked at one-child and two-child households, and in one-child
households having an obese parent made a child more than twice as likely
to be obese themselves,” Pachucki said.
Unsurprisingly, if the parents of an only child had a large intake of
junk food, this led to a higher chance that the child would be obese,
with a lesser risk if those children were involved in vigorous physical
activity.
For two-child families, having an obese sibling led to a risk that
was in excess of fives time of that than if the brother or sister wasn’t
obese.
It was also found that if both children in a two-child family were
the same gender, the elder sibling being obese resulted in an even
heavier likelihood of the younger child being obese.
Girls with an older sister who was obese were 8 times more at risk of
being obese themselves compared to girls with an older sister of a
healthy weight, whilst boys with an older obese brother were a
staggering 11 times more at risk.
“Parents are often very explicit models of behaviour; they do the
food purchasing, and they control a lot of aspects of their children’s
lives,” Pachucki said. “I was expecting there to be a stronger
correlation with parents’ obesity, but I was surprised that the siblings
were stronger.”
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