Children mirror weight gain and losses of their mothers but not fathers

Authored by telegraph.co.uk and submitted by Wagamaga
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Children mirror the weight gain and losses of their mothers but not their fathers, a study has found.

A team from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim looked at activity levels of 4,400 children and their parents over 11 years to discover if there was a link in their weights.

They found that if a mother lost weight, their children followed suit.

Doctoral student Marit Næss said: “Parents have a major impact on their children's health and lifestyle. Behaviours that lead to obesity are easily transferred from parent to child.

"Mothers whose activity levels drop as their children are growing up are linked to children with higher BMI in adolescence.”

But the researchers found no significant link between a child’s weight and a father shedding or piling on the pounds.

The researchers believe the disparity is due to mothers primarily being responsible for planning activities, and making food choices.

The team found that mothers whose activity levels dropped as their children were growing up had teenagers with bigger BMIs than those who had stayed a healthy weight. But when fathers changed their activity levels it made not difference.

JimmyTehF on November 26th, 2018 at 01:01 UTC »

Makes sense - they're likely eating the same food you are when you're young - since they most likely prepared it. At least in traditional homes or homes where children live with their mother over their father

burnuntilpure on November 26th, 2018 at 00:45 UTC »

Probably because mother are feeding them the food they both eat?

Wagamaga on November 25th, 2018 at 21:57 UTC »

Children mirror the weight gain and losses of their mothers but not their fathers, a study has found.

A team from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim looked at activity levels of 4,400 children and their parents over 11 years to discover if there was a link in their weights.

They found that if a mother lost weight, their children followed suit.

Doctoral student Marit Næss said: “Parents have a major impact on their children's health and lifestyle. Behaviours that lead to obesity are easily transferred from parent to child.

"Mothers whose activity levels drop as their children are growing up are linked to children with higher BMI in adolescence.”

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2018/11/25/d/