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What's Eating Our Kids

An Emotional Component to Obesity?

By Kelly Burgess

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Stress eating and comfort eating. They're well-known triggers for overeating in adults, but could they be a cause of obesity in children as well?

C.T. O'Donnell, president and CEO of KidsPeace (the National Center for Kids Overcoming Crisis), thinks so, and has put forth that thesis in an essay in a recent issue of Philanthropy News Digest.

In it, he acknowledges that physical factors, such as poor eating habits and lack of exercise, play a significant role in childhood obesity. However, he also points out that despite a flood of good intentions, public awareness messages, diets and advice, our kids are getting bigger and bigger.

Stressed Is Desserts Spelled Backwards
O'Donnell, who has 35 years of experience heading up childcare and advocacy organizations as well as being the father of three, wonders if a rising tide of stressors on children could be part of the reason there has been such an explosion in childhood obesity. It makes sense when you think of it from an adult perspective, which O'Donnell does when he notes the following:

While no one thinks twice when adults have a bad day at the office or go through a particularly painful breakup and have an extra mug of beer in the local tavern or an extra pint of chocolate macadamia madness from their freezer, the role of emotions and stressors in childhood obesity is almost absent from the popular national debate. But the truth is: It's not only what our kids are eating ... sometimes, it's what's eating our kids.


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