Your Health Care
Provider
Ask
your health care provider for brochures, booklets, or other information
about healthy eating, physical activity, and weight control. He or she
may be able to refer you to other health care professionals who work
with overweight children, such as registered dietitians, psychologists,
and exercise physiologists.
Weight-control
Program
You may want to think about a treatment program if:
- You have changed your family’s eating and physical activity habits and your child has not reached a healthy weight.
- Your
health care provider has told you that your child’s health or emotional
well-being is at risk because of his or her weight.
The overall goal of a treatment program should be to help your whole family adopt healthy eating and physical activity habits that you can keep up for the rest of your lives. Here are some other things a weight-control program should do:
- Include
a variety of health care professionals on staff, including doctors,
registered dietitians, psychiatrists or psychologists, and exercise
physiologists.
- Evaluate your child’s
weight, growth, and health before enrolling him or her in the program.
The program should also monitor these factors while your child is
enrolled.
- Adapt to the specific age and
abilities of your child. Programs for 4-year-olds should be different
from those for 12-year-olds.
- Help your family keep up healthy eating and physical activity behaviors after the program ends.
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