Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has she been checked for PCOS?
Age 16 is when it actually started for my sister but she didn't get a proper diagnosis until almost age 20 in college.
When she started gaining weight at age 16, I can remember my mom riding her about not being active enough, quitting basketball and dance, eating healthy when not at home, etc. She said she quit basketball because it was too much to try to keep up with running up and down the court - it became too hard. She quit dance because she was being made fun of. She claimed to not eat junk when out with friends and I was witness to that many times when I'd hang out with her.
It didn't matter what she told my mom or doctors, they never believed her. The weight really started packing on in college and of course, my mom was all "it's the freshman 15, not freshman 40!" to her.
I think it was health services on campus who recommended she see an endocrinologist to make sure she wasn't diabetic one time when she went in for some kind of issue. She found one on her own and that doctor did tests and was like no, you're not diabetic but I want you to see my partner here who specializes in PCOS. Boom, she got a diagnosis and it was like it all clicked into place. She cried so hard when she found a doctor who listened to her and didn't think she was lying about her eating habits.
wow, so important. My DH is endocrinologist and I didn't know this! (I'm sure he does) I sympathize, OP. I have always been super thin, and my DD started gaining weight around age 15 also (when she first got her period, now that I think of it) I can't say a thing to her, ever about weight. She is athletic, and yes, alot of it is muscle. But some of it appears to be overeating, which most (?) of America does very well. I won't say any more, because the discussion here seems to slam on those of us who think its not great to be overweight
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP this is very hard.
I completely understand.
But your dd will have to make the decision to lose weight on her own.
Yes, but that should not stop OP from trying to help her daughter now before she is disabled due to any number of likely serious adverse conditions that will develop.
Anonymous wrote:Has she been checked for PCOS?
Age 16 is when it actually started for my sister but she didn't get a proper diagnosis until almost age 20 in college.
When she started gaining weight at age 16, I can remember my mom riding her about not being active enough, quitting basketball and dance, eating healthy when not at home, etc. She said she quit basketball because it was too much to try to keep up with running up and down the court - it became too hard. She quit dance because she was being made fun of. She claimed to not eat junk when out with friends and I was witness to that many times when I'd hang out with her.
It didn't matter what she told my mom or doctors, they never believed her. The weight really started packing on in college and of course, my mom was all "it's the freshman 15, not freshman 40!" to her.
I think it was health services on campus who recommended she see an endocrinologist to make sure she wasn't diabetic one time when she went in for some kind of issue. She found one on her own and that doctor did tests and was like no, you're not diabetic but I want you to see my partner here who specializes in PCOS. Boom, she got a diagnosis and it was like it all clicked into place. She cried so hard when she found a doctor who listened to her and didn't think she was lying about her eating habits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: Consider having your daughter apply for an amount of life insurance that requires a physical. Once she is denied/rejected for coverage or only offered coverage at an extremely premium (rating), she may understand the need to seek medical help.
OP: You are 100% right to be concerned. This is both a mental health issue and an issue of physical health. Having a heart attack at a young age is unnecessary & preventable.
what the actual f*** is wrong with you
Seriously. I read these threads and I am blown away by just how awful these parents are. It is truly horrifying.
Anonymous wrote:OP this is very hard.
I completely understand.
But your dd will have to make the decision to lose weight on her own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: Consider having your daughter apply for an amount of life insurance that requires a physical. Once she is denied/rejected for coverage or only offered coverage at an extremely premium (rating), she may understand the need to seek medical help.
OP: You are 100% right to be concerned. This is both a mental health issue and an issue of physical health. Having a heart attack at a young age is unnecessary & preventable.
what the actual f*** is wrong with you
Right back at you. You do not care about another person's health and well being. Fine. Not your problem.
You think forcing your child to undergo a physical so that an insurance company will deny them and you can use that as ammo to shame them into trying to lose weight is good for their well-being?
Yes. Whatever it takes in order for the individual to avoid the unnecessary adverse health effects that are certain to follow. And if you don't think that obese people suffer psychologically, then you should do a bit of research.
Some of us--like the OP-care about the physical health and mental well being of a teenager who is obese unnecessarily.
You hate your kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: Consider having your daughter apply for an amount of life insurance that requires a physical. Once she is denied/rejected for coverage or only offered coverage at an extremely premium (rating), she may understand the need to seek medical help.
OP: You are 100% right to be concerned. This is both a mental health issue and an issue of physical health. Having a heart attack at a young age is unnecessary & preventable.
This 100%! Op, I’m with you. I’d be worried, too. Obesity is the cause of so many childhood and adult diseases. We have to get it under control. No amount of “body positive” framing will change the cold hard facts of diabetes, heart disease, high cholesterol, increased cancer risk, mental illness, infertility, etc that comes with obesity
Have her doctor talk to her about healthy eating and exercise. It won’t help coming from you. Best of luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: Consider having your daughter apply for an amount of life insurance that requires a physical. Once she is denied/rejected for coverage or only offered coverage at an extremely premium (rating), she may understand the need to seek medical help.
OP: You are 100% right to be concerned. This is both a mental health issue and an issue of physical health. Having a heart attack at a young age is unnecessary & preventable.
what the actual f*** is wrong with you
Right back at you. You do not care about another person's health and well being. Fine. Not your problem.
You think forcing your child to undergo a physical so that an insurance company will deny them and you can use that as ammo to shame them into trying to lose weight is good for their well-being?
Yes. Whatever it takes in order for the individual to avoid the unnecessary adverse health effects that are certain to follow. And if you don't think that obese people suffer psychologically, then you should do a bit of research.
Some of us--like the OP-care about the physical health and mental well being of a teenager who is obese unnecessarily.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP: Consider having your daughter apply for an amount of life insurance that requires a physical. Once she is denied/rejected for coverage or only offered coverage at an extremely premium (rating), she may understand the need to seek medical help.
OP: You are 100% right to be concerned. This is both a mental health issue and an issue of physical health. Having a heart attack at a young age is unnecessary & preventable.
what the actual f*** is wrong with you
Right back at you. You do not care about another person's health and well being. Fine. Not your problem.
You think forcing your child to undergo a physical so that an insurance company will deny them and you can use that as ammo to shame them into trying to lose weight is good for their well-being?