A computer device is helping clinicians at a Bristol hospital tackle the
problem of childhood obesity.
Obesity is a major issue in the UK which has the highest climbing rate of
childhood obesity in Europe. Private health insurer Bupa estimates that
currently up to 15 per cent of children in the UK are overweight or obese. By
2010, one million children in the UK are expected to be classed as obese.
There are various initiatives under way to tackle the problem. Now the
Mandometer research being used at the
Bristol Royal Hospital for Children
has won the
Bupa
Foundation Clinical Excellence award worth £10,000.
The Mandometer,
a treatment developed in the US, comprises a computer attached to scales. The
attached plate is filled with food and the computer charts how much food the
child eats. This then allows the researchers to see if a child is eating more
than is healthy.
Dr Julian Hamilton-Shield, who leads the
Care of Childhood Obesity Clinic at
the Bristol Royal, said the clinic which was set up in 2003 is having great
success; eight in 10 of the children attending have reduce their body mass
index.
He said: "We have had great success at our clinic but there is so much more
to be done if we are to prevent these obese children from becoming obese adults.
"
Half of the award won by the hospital goes to the team personally; the other
half is invested in further research.
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