Last updated: February 11, 2010

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Obese Aussie kids need gastric bands - study

Study says give more kids gastric bands

Obesity

Two fat children - one on left is "obese", the other is "solidly built" / Peter Nicholson Source: The Australian

  • 10% of boys and 7% of girls are obese
  • Up 2% from similar studies in the 1980s
  • Study proposes gastric banding as option

THE authors of a major new Australian study into childhood obesity are advocating a big increase in the number of juvenile gastric-banding operations to tackle the growing prevalence of morbidly overweight kids.

Around 10 per cent of Australian boys, and seven per cent of girls, are now obese, Associate Professor John Dixon, head of the Obesity Research Unit at Melbourne's Monash University, said.

This is up from a prevalence of about two per cent in the 1980s.

In other countries the numbers are even greater.

But healthy eating and exercise simply doesn't work for some of the most extremely fat children, the two-year study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association today, found.

It suggested gastric banding - currently a surgical operation almost exclusively only offered to adults - is a much more effective and safe method of weight loss for children aged 14 to 18.

The study took 50 extremely overweight children and gave 25 of them laparoscopic adjustable gastric bands and put the other 25 on healthy eating and exercise plans.

Those with gastric bands lost, on average, 79 per cent of their excess weight while those on the healthy lifestyle program achieved losses of only 13 per cent.

The research was conducted at the Centre for Obesity Research and Education at Monash University and the Centre for Adolescent Health at the Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne.

Lead author of the study, Professor Paul O'Brien, said the gastric band group also showed improvements in general health and self-esteem.

Associate Professor Dixon said healthy lifestyles were still capable of helping obese youngsters achieve weight loss - but he advocated an increase in juvenile gastric banding.

"We should always try and exhaust other options but what this study shows is that there is now no reason why we shouldn't extrapolate down adult treatments - gastric banding - into adolescents," he said.

"We're cautious about giving some surgical treatments to young people; adults are more willing to take risks with operations and experimental treatments etc.

"What we are saying is that there are no extra safety risks with gastric banding among children.

"And it is every bit as effective."

Prof Susan Sawyer, also a co-author and director of the Centre for Adolescent Health, Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, said governments now faced the challenge of ploughing more resources into additional clinical services for obese children.

The authors stressed gastric banding was not a "quick fix" approach and said careful assessment counselling prior to gastric band operations would be required.

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  • Boo Boo of Lake Macquarie Posted at 5:00 PM February 10, 2010

    Obesity should be treated on an individual basis, for some, it's an eating disorder so lap band is not going to change that. I have a lap band and it definitely is not an easy option, I still have to exercise and diet but I found the thing that is helping me the most is counselling as in why I feel the need to comfort myself with eating? The same as alcoholics need a drink to cope or smokers need a cigarette to cope, a chocolate bar helps me cope with stress but I'm slowly trying to change that bad habit by using exercise as way to cope with life's stressors. The lap band is a tool not a cure. Let's help the kids that are susceptible to obesity to begin with by providing them and their families with counselling and education.

  • Juanita of Melbourne Posted at 4:40 PM February 10, 2010

    Bring back cooking classses (Home Economics it was known as way back in the 1970s!). Teach kids to plan and cook meals and give them some invaluable life skills. Too bad Home Ec has become untrendy in schools - we need much more emphasis on practical nutrition and diet issues and MUCH less on theory.

  • DARWINCROC of Darwin NT Posted at 4:33 PM February 10, 2010

    Maybe if the fresh food items and fruit were cheaper than the junk, parents on low incomes could afford to feed kids better! As a divorced mother of 4 with a deadbeat ex husband, it is cheaper to buy garbage food than healthy stuff, for our family it is a choice better eating or not, chips in the lunch box are cheaper than one full of fruit. WHY?

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