Health officials revise tool to track severe obesity in kids

FILE- This April 3, 2018 file photo shows a closeup of a beam scale in New York. U.S. health officials have updated a tool to track rising cases of severe obesity among children who were previously off the charts. Expanded growth charts released Thursday, Dec. 15, 2022 by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now include a body mass index of 60 鈥 up from previous charts that stopped at a BMI of 37. (AP Photo/Patrick Sison, File)

U.S. health officials have revised a tool to track the rising cases of severe obesity among children who were previously off the charts.

Updated growth charts released Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now extend to a body mass index of 60 鈥 up from previous charts that stopped at a BMI of 37, with additional categories to track obesity in kids ages 2 to 19.

In recent decades, severe obesity among children in America has nearly quadrupled, experts said.

鈥淲e noticed a decade ago that we were kind of outstripping our growth charts,鈥 said Dr. Tom Inge, who directs the weight loss surgery program at Lurie Children鈥檚 Hospital of Chicago.

The CDC charts are the most widely used tool in the U.S. to track growth and development in kids. Parents are used to discussing the progress of their children鈥檚 growth from the time they are babies, noted the CDC's Dr. Alyson Goodman. The new charts will be 鈥渆xtremely helpful鈥 in guiding better conversations between parents and health care providers, she said.

鈥淵ou use these charts as a visual aid," Goodman said.

The old charts had been used since 2000. They were based on data from U.S. surveys conducted from 1963 to 1994, when far fewer children were obese, let alone severely obese, said Cynthia Ogden, a CDC epidemiologist. Today, about 4.5 million children 鈥 about 6% 鈥 fall into that category

Growth charts show patterns of development by age, expressed in BMI, a calculation of height and weight, and also in curves called percentiles. Unlike adults, children are not classified as obese or severely obese based on a strict BMI cutoff, Inge noted. Instead, kids are described as obese based on percentiles 鈥 where they fall compared to other kids their age.

A child is considered obese if they reach the 95th percentile on the growth charts, and severely obese at 120% of that mark 鈥 or with a BMI of 35 or higher, For instance, a 17-year-old boy who is 5 feet, 8 inches tall and weighs 250 pounds would have a BMI of 38 and be described as severely obese.

The old charts didn't include children like Bryan Alcala of Aurora, Illinois, who first sought help in 2019 as a high school freshman who was 5 feet, 5 inches and weighed about 300 pounds.

鈥淭hat was when it kind of got out of control,鈥 recalled Alcala, who had put on extra pounds after developing a rare childhood bone disease that limited his activity.

Children like Alcala, with BMIs of 45, 50 or higher, topped out on the CDC charts, making it difficult to assess their status or properly plot their progress, often delaying treatment, Inge said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like driving a car at night with no headlights and no dashboard,鈥 Inge said. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 know where they are with regard to their peers.鈥

Alcala, now 17, had weight loss surgery in April and lost 115 pounds, with 10 more to go.

鈥淓verything is going good now," he said.

However, one expert who questions the use of BMI to assess adults, said doctors need to be careful using the new charts with kids. They should focus on behaviors that drive weight gain, taking care not to stigmatize kids and families, said Dr. Tracy Richmond, an associate professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School.

鈥淯sing it as a visual tool for families, I find problematic,鈥 said Richmond. 鈥淭he family and child already knows they鈥檙e living in a large body. We clinicians are not going to be providing any new information with that.鈥

But Erika Alcala, Bryan鈥檚 mother, said she was glad the new growth charts will include kids like her son.

鈥淯ntil you see it on paper and in front of you, you don鈥檛 know,鈥 she said.

___

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute鈥檚 Department of Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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