This country faces a broad and frightening rogues’ gallery of challenges to its health. From the recent revelation that gunshots are the leading cause of death in children to the opioid epidemic to the overworked and discouraged health care providers, the crises are so numerous it is hard to choose where we should be investing what little political will we can muster. And, where do these disasters fit against a landscape raked by natural and climate change–triggered catastrophes? How do we even begin to triage our vocabulary as we are trying to label them?
The lead article in October’s journal Pediatrics makes a heroic effort to place pediatric obesity into this pantheon of health disasters. The authors of this Pediatrics Perspective ask a simple question: Should the United States declare pediatric obesity a public health emergency? They have wisely chosen to narrow the question to the pediatric population as being a more realistic target and one that is more likely to pay bigger dividends over time.
While acknowledging that obesity prevention strategies have been largely ineffective to this point, the authors are also concerned that despite the promising development of treatment strategies, the rollout of these therapies is likely to be uneven because of funding and disparities in health care delivery.
After reviewing pros and cons for an emergency declaration, they came to the conclusion that despite the scope of the problem and the fact that health emergencies have been declared for conditions effecting fewer individuals, now is not the time. The authors observed that a declaration may serve only to hype “the problem without offering tangible solutions.” Even when as yet to be discovered effective therapies become available, the time lag before measurable improvement is likely to be so delayed that “catastrophizing” pediatric obesity may be just another exercise in wolf-crying.
A closer look
While I applaud the authors for their courage in addressing this question and their decision to discourage an emergency declaration, a few of their observations deserve a closer look. First, they are legitimately concerned that any health policy must be careful not to further perpetuate the stigmatization of children with obesity. However, they feel the recognition by all stakeholders “that obesity is a genetically and biologically driven disease are essential.” While I have supported the disease designation as a pragmatic strategy to move things forward, I would prefer their statement to read “obesity can be ... “ I don’t think we have mined the data deep enough to determine how many out of a cohort of a million obese children from across a wide span of socioeconomic strata have become obese primarily as a result of decisions made by school departments, parents, and governmental entities – all of which had the resources to make healthier decisions but failed to do so.
While a majority of the population may believe that obesity is a “condition of choice,” I think they would be more likely to support the political will for action if they saw data that acknowledges that yes, obesity can be a condition of choice, but here are the circumstances in which choice can and can’t make a difference. Language must always be chosen carefully to minimize stigmatization. However, remember we are not pointing fingers at victims; we are instead looking for teaching moments in which adults can learn to make better choices for the children under their care who are too young to make their own.
Finally, as the authors of this Pediatric Perspectives considered cons of a declaration of health care emergency, they raised the peculiarly American concern of personal autonomy. As they pointed out, there are unfortunate examples in this country in which efforts to limit personal choice have backfired and well-meaning and potentially effective methods for limiting unhealthy behaviors have been eliminated in the name of personal freedom. I’m not sure how we manage this except to wait and be judicious as we move forward addressing pediatric obesity on a national scale. I urge you to take a few minutes to read this perspective. It is a topic worth considering.
Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at pdnews@mdedge.com.