Childhood Obesity: Article Analysis

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by the cost of obesity, obesity costs state Medicaid programs $5 million+ each year. The healthcare costs about $770 per person per year, most people that are obese don’t have the money to get healthcare. As the numbers of americans who are obese rise so does healthcare.
Consequently obesity does not only run in adults but also in children. There have been arguments on how schools have an input on childhood obesity. Since the 1970s childhood obesity has tripled, about one in five children in school have obesity (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention page1). BMI percentile is preferred for measuring children and young adults ages between 2-20 this means that they are still growing at different rates, but it depends on there age and sex.Children with a BMI at or above the 85% and less than 95% are considered overweight, and children at 95% and have obesity. Children with obesity are most likely to have impact on their physical, social, and emotional health. For many obese children it is harder for them to socialize with other kids because some of them feel as if there not fast enough or maybe because the definition of perfection to kids growing up is thin and beautiful. Many children with obesity end up having depression or anxiety, this can also lead to suicide.
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Children with obesity usually have higher risk of having other chronic health conditions and diseases that impact physical health for example sleep apnea,asthma,bone and joint problems, risk factors for heart disease and type 2 diabetes (Childhood Obesity Facts p 1). Also, if it turns into a long term condition they can be linked into serious conditions such as metabolic syndrome and several types of cancer. Children growing up with obesity are most likely to die before they're