The Daily - An Aggressive New Approach to Childhood Obesity
Episode Date: January 26, 2023Recent advice from the American Academy of Pediatrics has recommended a bold approach to treating the millions of children in the United States who are affected by obesity. Counseling, drug treatment ...and even surgery should be considered, the group says.The guidelines are a response to a deeper understanding of what obesity is — and what to do about it.Guest: Gina Kolata, a medical reporter for The New York Times.Background reading: The new guidelines have underscored how complicated childhood obesity is for patients and health providers.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.Â
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, the story behind sweeping and, to many, revolutionary new guidelines for how to treat
millions of children with obesity.
I spoke to my colleague, Gina Collada,
about what led to the change.
It's Thursday, January 26th.
Gina, tell us about these new recommendations for children in the U.S. with obesity.
These are recommendations by an influential group, the American Academy of Pediatrics.
They are a departure from what people have been doing in the past.
They are telling pediatricians in very definitive language to do something very bold.
When they have a child who has obesity, they say, you have to be aggressive.
You have to take action now.
And it is a response to a new understanding of what obesity is and what to do about it.
And just remind us of how widespread a problem this is
and how many people are likely to be impacted by these bold new guidelines.
It's a huge number.
14.4 million children and adolescents.
One in five.
A lot of children.
20% of American children.
That is right.
And what's the nature of the recommendations from this group?
They're very sweeping. They involve examining a child as young as two and saying,
does this child have obesity? If so, they advise intensive lifestyle counseling and treatment.
And for children who are 12 years old or older and they have obesity,
they say it is appropriate and recommended to prescribe a drug that will help them lose weight.
And for children 13 and older with severe obesity,
they might want to consider bariatric surgery, weight loss surgery.
Wow. Those are pretty aggressive forms of intervention for young people.
Absolutely. And I know their concern is that you can't ignore obesity in general. It doesn't go away.
Kids do not outgrow it.
And once it gets started,
it just persists through a lifetime
and gets worse as the child gets older.
And especially for adults,
obesity is linked to a higher risk of diabetes,
high blood pressure, and other issues.
So what the American Academy of Pediatrics is saying,
if you see obesity in a child, you just can't ignore it. You really can't. You've got to take
action now. So how do we get to this point where this very influential group of doctors thinks
that this level of intervention is required? It's been a really long journey. It started back in the 1960s,
sort of the baby fat era. Around then, there really was not much obesity. Only 5% of children
and adolescents had obesity. So people just said, okay, well, you know, some kids are chubby
and most of them will outgrow it. It was not on anybody's agenda as a big issue.
But then in the 1970s and especially in the 1980s,
the rate of obesity really picked up.
Instead of 5%, 10% of children and adolescents had obesity.
We always say that a fat baby is a healthy baby,
but that's an idea we should change.
People were starting to say, we have an obesity epidemic here.
Ideally, the calories you take in each day are just about equal the calories you use.
And the thought was, well, you know, change the diet.
Diet food started coming out.
Diet Coke.
Fresca.
Diet Pepsi won't go to your waist. Diet Coke. Fresca.
Diet everything.
Right.
Less sugar.
Artificial sugars and things.
It's the only part of my diet I can really stick to.
Don't eat so much sugar.
Exercise more. This should eat so much sugar. Exercise more.
This should not be an issue.
You just have to get people moving and tell them to eat fewer calories, and everything will be fine. So in this era, it sounds like obesity in children is seen as a question of lifestyles and decisions and choices that are made, choices that are bad or choices that are good.
Absolutely.
And choices that are made, choices that are bad or choices that are good.
Absolutely.
But even with all this focus on diet foods and proper nutrition and getting out and exercising,
the problem was just not going away.
And in fact, it was getting worse.
So in the 1990s, people said, well, maybe we could do some interventions and see what would happen if we did a large study and try to see if we do everything that we think will make a difference,
are we right?
So the National Institutes of Health spent a lot of money
on two large and rigorous studies, and they said,
let's randomize schools.
Some schools are the control schools.
Don't touch the kids there. Everything's the same.
The other schools, they had a whole lot more physical education. They brought in special
teachers to exercise for the kids. They made cafeteria meals more nutritious. They got rid
of sugary sodas, less fattening meals in the cafeteria. They taught children about proper
nutrition and why they had to exercise. They
brought the parents in. So the idea here is to isolate what was thought to make a difference
and study that. Right. And the question was, what were the kids who were in the intervention schools
going to end up with lower weights than the kids in the control schools. But the results were nothing like what the researchers were hoping for.
After studying thousands of kids for years in this intervention, where they did everything
that they thought was needed, there was no difference in the kids' weights.
Wow.
But why didn't it work? What was the conclusion that the researchers reached about why changing so many factors associated at the time with healthy
living and weight loss? Why did those not make a difference? They were baffled. There wasn't an
easy answer here. Some people said, it's the neighborhood. It's the
expectations of families and children. It's poverty. It's lack of access to fresh fruits
and vegetables. And, you know, a lot of that stuff, it's not like it's nonsense. It really isn't.
But, you know, what happened after that was our understanding of obesity really began to change.
Among some people, not everybody, but among some people, a new thinking about what's really going on here.
And what was that thinking?
Well, in addition to environmental factors, there was also a strong genetic component.
Genes started to be found.
I mean, there's dozens now that affect how much people want to eat,
how full they feel,
what kinds of foods they crave.
And it's not like there's one gene.
What happens is people inherit like a cluster
and different clusters for different people.
It's not all under your control.
You can't be arbitrarily thin
and you can't be arbitrarily fat. You don't
have absolute control over what you weigh, even if you want to have that kind of control.
So at this point, given the discoveries of genetic links to obesity, it becomes much clearer that this is not just about nurture, not just about the
environment, but in very large part, it's about nature, which, as you've said, totally changes
this question of fault and control. That is correct. And they started to say
obesity is a chronic disease. Now you could say lung cancer
among smokers. We call that a disease. We don't call it a lifestyle choice. Most smokers do not
get lung cancer. But there is an environmental impetus that in some people pushes them over the
edge. And I think with obesity, it might be the same thing. You say, it's a disease. You say,
why doesn't everybody have it then? Well, some people have a genetic push that gets them going in the right environment. Right. It's not that the environment doesn't play a role, but it's that
genetics are kind of an open door for the environment to walk into.
Right. That's a great way of saying it. Yes.
Right. That's a great way of saying it, yes.
So clearly what began in the 1960s with a kind of shrugged off approach from doctors who said let your kids run around the playground, they're going to lose that baby fat, has evolved into a much deeper understanding that childhood obesity is innate and intractable, and that the way we have all been approaching it and thinking about it as parents and as pediatricians has really been wrong.
That's absolutely correct. This is a real shift in thinking about what obesity is
and what you're supposed to do when you see it in a child.
We'll be right back.
So, Gina, now that we understand
how we got here,
let's talk through these new guidelines
in greater detail
and how the people who wrote them envision them working with actual children.
So give us some scenarios for the age groups that are covered by these recommendations.
Let's start with the youngest children.
If a child is two, a two-year-old child, the guidelines say that they should be offered something that they call intensive
behavioral and lifestyle treatment. They say that's the most effective thing short of medications and
surgery. They're pretty intense. Yeah, describe that. Well, they say that you should involve at
least 26 hours of in-person treatment, including not just the child, but also the family,
with nutrition, physical activity, counseling on behavioral changes. These programs involve
lots of specialists, nutrition counselors, maybe psychological counseling, people to help with
physical activity. It's a big deal.
Right. And a big commitment of time.
A huge commitment of time. And often they are only available in medical centers,
in academic medical institutions.
So basically clinics.
Yes.
Got it. So this is the therapy recommended for the youngest children who are struggling with obesity. What about slightly older children?
They recommend that treatment for everyone.
But by the time you're 12,
they say you should be offered a prescription drug
to help you lose weight.
And what are those drugs?
There are a whole class of these drugs.
There are some new ones, though,
that are extremely effective for most people. They're so-called GLP-1 receptor agonists. That's the
class of drugs. They were discovered as diabetes drugs, but it turns out they act to decrease
appetite. They slow the rate at which people's stomachs empty, and they act on the brain,
so you don't want to eat as much. So this is an active medical attempt to make a child
less hungry, less frequently. Absolutely. That's what the idea is, yes. Okay, and what do we know
about the safety of young children taking this kind of medication, which may not have been designed
for them? No, they were approved by the FDA because they were actually tested in children age 12 and up.
And they are just as effective
and no more dangerous in children than in adults.
Have they been around for decades to find out like in 30 years?
No, but this is a serious chronic disease.
Okay, so I want to turn now to what, when you mentioned it seemed like the most extreme form of intervention for the older children, which is surgery.
So what kind of surgery do we mean when we refer to bariatric surgery?
This is for children 13 and older with severe obesity. There are a couple kinds of
bariatric surgery. They're pretty intense because what they do is they pretty much
rearrange your intestines, make your stomach into a little pouch, but also redirect the whole flow
of food. But they're strange because people often change their preferences for food.
People often have said things like, you know, I used to crave sweets,
and now I don't even care about sweets.
It has so many metabolic and biochemical changes on the body when you do this
that they don't really know which ones are making the difference.
But it is making a difference.
For most people, it works. And how
heavy duty a surgery is this? Especially the ones that you just described as the most effective. How
much of a recovery period are we talking about? Because rearranging someone's entire digestive
system doesn't seem minor. You know, it's so strange because they do it laparoscopically. And the
kids don't, and the adults too, they don't stay in the hospital long. It doesn't have a long
recovery time. But once you have it, it's forever. You have it the rest of your life.
You cannot reverse it. You can't say, I want my old intestines back. It's gone.
reverse it. You can't say, I want my old intestines back. It's gone.
And of course, doing something irreversible on a child is a big decision.
It is a huge decision. Yes.
So given the enormity of some of the interventions we're talking about, especially the surgery,
what have been the reactions to these recommendations? What are seen as the virtues of them as well as what have been the objections to them? Well, the virtues are that they take obesity seriously.
They don't ignore the problem. They don't say it will go away. And they say you need aggressive
action. Right. There are two big objections. One big objection is who is going
to pay for all this? Who is going to pay for it? Well, often insurers will pay for a doctor to
counsel a child, but many insurers will not pay for the whole team. So not the clinics that you
described, for example, doing the 26 hours of therapy. Yep. And usually the insurance will not
pay for the obesity medications.
That's fascinating. And they're expensive, $1,000 or so a month. The new ones that a lot of people
really want. Surgery, they'll pay for surgery. Interesting. So in many of the cases, this is
going to be an out-of-pocket expense. The therapy, the medication that would be out of reach for many people.
That's right. It's a huge issue. One hope is that maybe with these recommendations,
that will give a little push, and maybe people will start to pay insurers, especially Medicaid,
but at this point, no. And then there are people who, for a lot of reasons, would say, how about health at any size?
How about body positivity?
How about accepting me for what I am and stop trying to make me into some ideal of what you think a child or a person should look like?
And not everybody with obesity has health problems.
Just explain that.
I mean, that seems like an important sentence. Not everybody with obesity has health problems. Just explain that. I mean, that seems like an important sentence.
Not everybody with obesity has health problems.
There are people with obesity who do not have diabetes,
do not have high blood pressure,
who do not have any of the things that people are saying,
and a lot of people are healthy.
So leave them alone, some people would say.
But the reality is there's widespread discrimination against people with
obesity. And children and adolescents often suffer mightily. They're routinely bullied,
not just at school, weirdly enough, at home too. It's hard for them to make friends. Teachers have
lower expectations of them and give them lower grades. They often become anxious, depressed,
socially isolated. It's a big burden for a child. For many people with obesity,
it is a really difficult life. Right. But the question then becomes,
I have to think, do recommendations like the ones we have been talking about in this conversation
Do recommendations like the ones we've been talking about in this conversation make that burden less or potentially make it greater?
I mean, is it a fair concern that hyper-focus on obesity in kids could make it, in a sense, a defining feature of their lives?
Suddenly, doctors are saying something's wrong with you in a way that perhaps they didn't have to feel before.
I think they felt it. How could they not have felt it? I mean, you can't escape it. People stare at kids with obesity. They do. You are judged. And everywhere you go, people assume
it's your fault, you're out of control, and you're not a virtuous person.
Right. Even though we know from what you've told us about genetic research
that that's just simply not the case.
Absolutely.
So is the thinking, Gina, that recommendations like this
are liberating and cathartic for children and for their families
because it says to them all, we know how hard this is
and we know that this is a disease, and
we know that the only real solution is to act early and aggressively.
And that, in a sense, unburdens people.
That's my hope.
My hope is that if people actually know about, understand, and believe what the pediatricians are saying, it could
destigmatize obesity.
Children with obesity should not be stigmatized any more than a child with another chronic
disease like diabetes, asthma, anything else.
It's not their fault.
It's a disease and it has to be taken seriously.
Right. And these recommendations are, in that sense, at long last, meeting that reality where it is.
Yes, that's what I think.
Well, Gina, thank you very much.
We appreciate it.
Thank you, Michael.
It was a pleasure talking to you.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
In a history-making statement to the world's 1.3 billion Roman Catholics,
Pope Francis on Wednesday condemned laws that criminalize homosexuality as unjust and called on church leaders to embrace LGBTQ people in countries
where such laws exist. It was the Pope's latest overture to gay people and further highlighted
how different Francis is from his predecessor, Pope Benedict, who spoke out forcefully against
homosexuality. And on Wednesday, two prominent House Democrats,
Representatives Adam Schiff and Eric Swalwell, publicly protested a decision by the new House
Speaker, Republican Kevin McCarthy, to remove them from the influential House Intelligence Committee.
This decision by Kevin McCarthy to bow to the demands of the most extreme elements of
his conference and use the Intelligence Committee as this kind of political plaything doesn't show
the strength of his speakership. Indeed, it shows the weakness of his speakership.
The move is widely seen as an act of political revenge, since both Democrats are outspoken critics of former President Donald Trump and were deeply involved in impeaching him over McCarthy's objections.
During a news conference, Schiff said that the decision would undermine faith in the Intelligence Committee's work. It will only, I think, breed distrust
within the intelligence community
as to what it can share
and what it can feel confident
about sharing with the Congress.
Today's episode was produced by Carlos Prieto,
Stella Tan, and Shannon Lim.
It was edited by Lexi Diao and Paige Cowan,
contains original music by Marian Lozano
and Dan Powell, and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Grunberg and
Ben Landsberg of Wonderly. That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bilboro.
See you tomorrow.