Raising Children Network: the Australian parenting website
  • Suitable for 2-8Years

Living well to avoid childhood obesity: 10 tips

By Raising Children Network
 
 

Try these ideas to promote a healthy family lifestyle and help your child avoid problems with being overweight and obesity.

Schoolgirl eating mango

did you knowQuestion mark symbol

  • The number of Australian children with obesity nearly tripled between 1985 and 1995. The number of overweight children doubled in the same period. Today, 20-25% of Australian children are overweight or obese.
  • If you're concerned about your child's weight, ask your GP about a Body Mass Index (BMI) test, which will determine whether your child is in a healthy weight range.
 

You can help your child establish healthy habits from birth. If these habits are established early as part of your family's lifestyle, a natural part of the way you do things, you won't have to impose healthy patterns. This will help your child avoid problens with being overweight and obesity.

1. Promote healthy eating in your home. Children are more likely to develop healthy eating behaviours when they are provided with a choice of healthy foods in their home environment. So put healthy foods on your shopping list and prepare nutritional meals and snacks for the whole family. Having fewer unhealthy foods (like soft drinks, chips and lollies and snack bars) in your cupboard means you won't have to ‘police’ what your children eat.

2. As a family, familiarise yourself with the five food groups and the food amounts recommended for different age groups to support health and wellbeing. Remember that some categories of food should be enjoyed only occasionally and in small amounts. You could put up a poster that summarises this information in your kitchen or on your fridge, perhaps you could even make the poster together.

3. Make a distinction between ‘everyday food’ and ‘sometimes food’. Talk to your child about this distinction. Everyday food is the healthy stuff and sometimes food is the not-so-healthy stuff. You might enjoy it but eat it only occasionally.

4. Establish healthy eating routines. Healthy eating is not only about food choices, it's also about eating nutritious foods on a regular, predictable basis. For example, it is important to:

  • eat breakfast
  • eat regular meals and snacks throughout the day
  • eat meals together at the table or kitchen bench (rather than in front of the TV)
  • allow enough time so that meals can be eaten in a relaxed and unhurried way.

5. Acknowledge your child whenever he chooses healthy foods. You can do this by giving him some good positive feedback (sometimes called descriptive praise), for example, ‘Wow, you picked a banana for morning tea! Delicious!'. Remind your child of the benefits of healthy eating, for example, saying things like ‘eating meat helps your heart stay strong so it can pump blood all around your body’. Try to avoid nagging or making eating and mealtimes a battleground or occasions for power struggles. You are more likely to encourage healthy habits by making mealtimes fun.

6. Make physical activity part of everyday life. Many people think that being active means playing sport or doing strenuous exercise, but that's only one way of being active. For example, you can encourage your child to walk instead of getting in the car, take the dog for a walk instead of watching TV, and use steps instead of lifts or escalators in shopping centres. Remind your child of these options, and take a moment to notice and comment when he chooses everyday physical activity.

Encourage everyday physical activity by saying:

  • ‘It’s time to play outside now.’
  • ‘Rex needs some practice fetching. It would be great if you would go outside and throw the ball for him.'
  • ‘Let’s walk to the shop to get the things we need for dinner.'
  • ‘Wow, you have been jumping on the trampoline for ages.’
  • ‘Keep going, your sandcastle is getting so big.’
  • ‘You did a fantastic job pulling the weeds out of the garden. It’s great when you help.’
  • ‘You rode a really long way today on your bike, well done.’

7. Enjoy physical activity as a family. You could try bike rides together or family visits to the park to throw a Frisbee or kick a football. Talk about these as fun play rather than exercise. Sometimes children who are forced to exercise or participate in activities that they don't enjoy develop a negative attitude to physical activity for the rest of their lives.

8. Limit the time your child spends on low-activity pastimes such as television watching, DVDs, computer and other electronic games as these reinforce sedentary habits.

9. Try not to draw too much attention to your child’s weight, as this may cause low self-esteem and lack of confidence. For example, when it comes to weighing your child, perhaps you could make a game of it, weighing yourself first and talking about how the scales work.

10. Set a good example. Parents who have a healthy diet and frequently engage in physical activity are much more likely to encourage the same habits in their children. In other words, keep in mind the power of modelling — that is, your child learns mostly from what you do yourself, not from what you tell him to do. Practise what you preach!

 
  • Last updated19-07-2007
  • Last reviewed19-07-2007