What Is
Nutritional Child Abuse?
Nutritional child abuse is the
most common form of child abuse [i]
of which we are aware.
Nutritional child abuse is doing something or failing to do
something nutritionally that results in harm to a child or puts a child at risk
of harm. Child abuse can be physical, sexual or emotional. Neglect, or not
providing for a child's needs, is also a form of abuse.
Overweight/obese
children are prone to developing the following conditions: [ii]
Obese children can develop
serious health problems, such as diabetes and heart disease, often carrying
these conditions into an obese adulthood. Overweight children are at higher risk
of developing:
· Type 2 diabetes
· Metabolic syndrome
· High blood pressure
· Asthma and other respiratory problems
· Sleep disorders
· Liver disease
· Early puberty or menarche
· Eating disorders
· Skin infections
The social and emotional
fallout also can hurt your child. Being overweight can cause:
· Low self-esteem and bullying. Children often tease or bully their overweight peers, who suffer a loss of self-esteem and an increased risk of depression as a result.
· Behavior and learning problems. Overweight children tend to have more anxiety and poorer social skills than normal-weight children have. At one extreme, these problems may lead to acting out and disrupting the classroom. At the other, they may cause social withdrawal. Stress and anxiety also interfere with learning. School-related anxiety can create a vicious cycle in which ever-growing worry fuels ever-declining academic performance.
·
Depression. Social isolation and low self-esteem
create overwhelming feelings of hopelessness in some overweight children. When
children lose hope that their lives will improve, they're well on the way to
depression. A depressed child may lose interest in normal activities, sleep more
than usual or cry a lot. Some depressed children hide their sadness and appear
emotionally flat instead. Either way, depression is as serious in children as in
adults. If you think your child is depressed, talk with him or her and share
your concerns with his or her doctor.
There
is no specific definition of nutritional child abuse in Federal Law.
Still
it can be maintained from the above, that Federal law describes the fattening up
of children for the kill as a form of child abuse: [iii]
Any
recent act or failure to act on the part of a parent or caretaker which results
in death, serious physical or emotional harm, sexual abuse or exploitation; or
An act or failure to act which
presents an imminent risk of serious harm.
It should be clear that childhood overweigh/obesity result in “death, serious physical or emotional harm” and that overweight/obese children are in imminent risk of serious harm and at risk of later harm as well.