Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. What is her percentile for height. I have a boy so perhaps different but from birth until 14 he was 97 percentile height and 98 for weight. He looked chubby. Our pediatrician said to not worry about it. That he was literally a big kid and his body would eventually change and he would need the extra pounds. For years however I was worried because he looked big - no other way to say it. Well fast forward. He is 16. He is 6’1 and thin and perfect BMI. He literally grew into his weight as our pediatrician said he would.. He was always strong and athletic and continues to be. As long as DS is healthy I wouldn’t focus too much on it. Bodies change quickly once they hit puberty. I recommend getting a second opinion from another pediatrician or nutritionist. Good luck.
BMI takes height into the equation. OP’s daughter’s BMI is higher than 97% of girls her same age and height. That puts her into the obesity category. I would take this seriously. She is 12 and just got her period so she is likely to gain more weight and fairly quickly if you don’t change the trajectory. How is her diet OP? It sounds like she is already active, which is great. I would probably just try to minimiz buying snack-type foods and keep food options clean and healthy. If she tends to lean very carb heavy in her food choices, try to curb that so it more balanced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are trying to justify why your 12 year old should remain obese and that is very sad. Your child is OBESE. She is therefore, not healthy. She needs less food and more movement.
Says someone who knows nothing about bmi. Can you have her get a DEXA scan to determine fat vs. muscle? I am one of the people where bmi has never made sense because I have “high muscle mass.”
Anonymous wrote:OP. What is her percentile for height. I have a boy so perhaps different but from birth until 14 he was 97 percentile height and 98 for weight. He looked chubby. Our pediatrician said to not worry about it. That he was literally a big kid and his body would eventually change and he would need the extra pounds. For years however I was worried because he looked big - no other way to say it. Well fast forward. He is 16. He is 6’1 and thin and perfect BMI. He literally grew into his weight as our pediatrician said he would.. He was always strong and athletic and continues to be. As long as DS is healthy I wouldn’t focus too much on it. Bodies change quickly once they hit puberty. I recommend getting a second opinion from another pediatrician or nutritionist. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:You are trying to justify why your 12 year old should remain obese and that is very sad. Your child is OBESE. She is therefore, not healthy. She needs less food and more movement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a 12 year old girl with a BMI in the 97th percentile, her pediatrician wants me to put her on a more restrictive diet and help her lose 20 pounds. I am hesitant because I worry it will cause body image issues, I also think she is otherwise very healthy. She is a 3 sport athlete with big muscles, she can lift and squat more than I can and has a fast one mile run time. She also just got her period for the first time and it seems like her body is already going through enough changes. What would you do here?
I mean… can’t you just do this stealthily and not tell her? A slow and steady approach that she might not even notice? Why would it give her body image issues if you don’t even mention anything has changed?
Despite what everyone says I would imagine that if the pediatrician thinks it’s a big deal you might want to actually take it seriously.
Anonymous wrote:I have a 12 year old girl with a BMI in the 97th percentile, her pediatrician wants me to put her on a more restrictive diet and help her lose 20 pounds. I am hesitant because I worry it will cause body image issues, I also think she is otherwise very healthy. She is a 3 sport athlete with big muscles, she can lift and squat more than I can and has a fast one mile run time. She also just got her period for the first time and it seems like her body is already going through enough changes. What would you do here?
Anonymous wrote:You are trying to justify why your 12 year old should remain obese and that is very sad. Your child is OBESE. She is therefore, not healthy. She needs less food and more movement.
Anonymous wrote:You are trying to justify why your 12 year old should remain obese and that is very sad. Your child is OBESE. She is therefore, not healthy. She needs less food and more movement.