2007
DOI: 10.1542/peds.2007-2329c
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Expert Committee Recommendations Regarding the Prevention, Assessment, and Treatment of Child and Adolescent Overweight and Obesity: Summary Report

Abstract: To revise 1998 recommendations on childhood obesity, an Expert Committee, comprised of representatives from 15 professional organizations, appointed experienced scientists and clinicians to 3 writing groups to review the literature and recommend approaches to prevention, assessment, and treatment. Because effective strategies remain poorly defined, the writing groups used both available evidence and expert opinion to develop the recommendations. Primary care providers should universally assess children for obe… Show more

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Cited by 3,904 publications
(3,839 citation statements)
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References 86 publications
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“…Because primary care settings can be effective for pediatric weight management programs, assessment, prevention, and intervention, efforts should be incorporated universally across primary care clinicians (Barlow, 2007;USPSTF, 2010). However, even when weight management interventions are implemented, 1 Beyond this difference, and despite very little overlap (n = 2) in the studies included in the two meta-analyses, the overall characteristics of the samples were quite similar.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because primary care settings can be effective for pediatric weight management programs, assessment, prevention, and intervention, efforts should be incorporated universally across primary care clinicians (Barlow, 2007;USPSTF, 2010). However, even when weight management interventions are implemented, 1 Beyond this difference, and despite very little overlap (n = 2) in the studies included in the two meta-analyses, the overall characteristics of the samples were quite similar.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Patient BMI is calculated by height and weight and categorized according to CDC BMI-for-age charts [8]. Per CDC guidelines, pediatric patients with less than the fifth percentile BMIfor-age are categorized as underweight; patients with BMIfor-age greater than the eighty-fifth percentile are categorized as overweight; and patients with BMI-for-age greater than the ninety-fifth percentile are categorized as obese (Appendix 2) [3,4,14]. Of the comorbidities collected by the ACS NSQIP 1 , only a history of asthma occurred with sufficient frequency to be used for our analysis.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To our knowledge, no studies have been conducted explicitly focusing on multi-ethnic low-income adolescents examining eating behaviors, weight bias, and psychological functioning with both a non-overweight and overweight sample. With obesity rates highest for multi-ethnic and low-income adolescents (Babey, Hastert, Wolstein, & Diamant, 2010;Barlow, 2007;Hastert, Babey, Diamant, & Brown, 2008;Singh, Siahpush, & Kogan, 2010), efforts to improve our understanding of eating behaviors, WB, and psychological distress in this population are warranted. Only by elucidating the correlations of these variables can effective multidisciplinary and multi-ethnic interventions be designed.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%