CONTACT: Ron Hartung
(850) 645-9205
ronald.hartung@med.fsu.edu
By Ron Hartung
April 2009FSU RESEARCHER WINS $2.2 MILLION
GRANT TO STUDY CHILDHOOD OBESITY
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 Suzanne B Johnson Ph.D. |
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- In response to a worrisome rise in childhood
obesity, Florida school districts have begun to monitor student
growth development every year, but there is little research
available to determine if the effort is having an effect.
Now, with a $2.2 million grant from the National Institutes of
Health and with the cooperation of Leon County Schools, a Florida
State University College of Medicine researcher will explore the
impact of school-based screening on student fitness and parent
behavior.
“NIH, the Institute of Medicine, and the Centers for Disease Control
really want this question answered. There will be a lot of people
interested in this,” said Suzanne Johnson, department chair in
medical humanities and social sciences at the College of Medicine,
who was awarded the four-year grant. “It’s a very big undertaking,
involving the cooperation of 12 elementary schools and a massive
amount of data collection.”
The stakes are huge. In the past 30 years, according to several
studies, childhood obesity has doubled for preschoolers and
adolescents and tripled for those ages 6 to 11. High obesity rates
are particularly common in ethnic-minority children. An obese child
often becomes an obese adult, and obesity opens the door to many
health problems.
Among them is type 2 diabetes, previously considered a disease of
older overweight adults but now increasingly prevalent among
children. At current U.S. rates, a 2003 study indicates, 33 percent
of boys and 39 percent of girls born in 2000 are expected to develop
it in their lifetime.
“Type 2 diabetes is totally preventable,” Johnson said. “It’s just
terrible to have kids with type 2 diabetes. It’s simply
unacceptable.”
She and her research team will monitor children at 12 Leon County
elementary schools that have a high percentage of ethnic-minority
students.
The primary aim is to study the impact of BMI (body mass index)
screenings. BMI, calculated from weight and height measurements, is
a reliable indicator of whether children are overweight. Each school
offers three wellness programs: a free after-school exercise program
for children sponsored by Capital Health Plan; expanded health
assessments sponsored by the FSU College of Medicine using funds
generated by Dance Marathon on the FSU campus; and a wellness Web
site that promotes healthy eating and activity. Researchers will
track the children to document how much their health changes and how
much their parents take advantage of the wellness programs.
Because the study continues over several years, researchers also
will get to assess what happens when the children aren’t in school.
“Data suggest overweight children often show improvement in fitness
during the school year if they participate in physical education or
other types of physical activity programs. However, they often gain
the weight back in the summer,” Johnson said. “We’ll be able to
track whether this phenomenon really happens.”
Parents are a key part of this project. They play a crucial role in
the diet and health habits their children develop.
“If you’re overweight as a child, you’re more likely to be
overweight as an adult,” Johnson said. “If you’re an overweight
kindergartner and we can get your weight down, you’re far less
likely to be obese as an adult.”
Johnson recently was chosen to receive a Distinguished Research
Professor Award from Florida State University. It honors outstanding
research among full professors who have attained national and
international visibility. She previously held that distinction at
the University of Florida and is the first from the young FSU
College of Medicine research program to be selected for the honor.
“Dr. Johnson is an outstanding scholar in her field,” College of
Medicine Dean John P. Fogarty wrote in his nomination letter, “and
is one of the first behavioral scientists to apply behavioral and
psychological science to serious medical problems in children.”
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