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SECTION ADMINISTRATOR
MaryBeth
McDonald, MS, RD.
MaryBeth McDonald is a Registered and Licensed
Dietitian/Nutritionist who maintains active memberships
in the American and Florida Dietetic Associations. Through her work and professional affiliations, she is
recognized as an expert source for the practice and
science of food, nutrition, and dietetics. MaryBeth is a
Director in the Foundation and serves as Chairperson of
the Nutrition Advisory Committee.
Ms. McDonald earned a
Bachelors Degree in Psychology from Boston College,
studied Food and Nutrition at Simmons College, completed
her Dietetic Internship at Mount Auburn Hospital (a
Harvard Medical School affiliate) and Masters Degree in
Business Management at Lesley University in Cambridge,
Massachusetts.
Recently, MaryBeth achieved a
new designation sponsored by the American Dietetic
Association (ADA) - a Certificate in Pediatric and
Adolescent Weight Management.
Through her current position as an Area Director,
Food and Nutrition Services for the School Board of
Broward County, Florida, and her work with the Health
and Wellness Foundation, Ms. McDonald is committed to
increasing the awareness of, and participation in the
solutions to the global
Childhood Obesity epidemic.
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William Campbell Douglass, ll, MD
July 31, 2006
Bed
without dinner = the opposite of thinner ?
In case you're blind, are boycotting TV and the
media (I can only hope), or have just arrived
back from an extended solo stay on a deserted
island, you already know that today's kids are
fatter than at any point in our nation's
history. The latest estimates peg the obesity
rate among 11-19 year olds -- not the incidence
of simply being overweight, mind you, but the
state of extreme fatness -- at more than 15%...
Now, compared to the 30+% of American adults who
are considered clinically obese, this may not
seem too alarming at first glance. But
considering that this age bracket (11-19)
typically represents the most active, energetic,
and metabolically efficient of all periods in
life, tomorrow's adults are going to have a huge
head start toward being hefty.
And leave it to the mainstream media and
conventional medical establishment to look a
problem in the eye and not just blink in the
formidable face of it, but look completely
through it to stare down a nonexistent
"problem" beyond. Here's what I mean:
Instead of blaming the incomprehensible number
of fast-food, candy, and cereal ads on
children's TV...
The ridiculously carbohydrate-heavy Food Pyramid
the government's literally cramming down kids'
throats every day in the school cafeteria...
Or the endless product placement of soft drinks
and junk foods (remember the Ninja Turtles and
their cravings for Dominoes pizza, or E.T.
with his Reese's pieces) in the movies...
They've now targeted parental discipline.
According to a National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development study of 872
children summarized in the June issue of the
journal Pediatrics, parents' disciplinary styles
have a measurable effect on childhood obesity
rates. And not surprisingly (to the mainstream's
discipline-weenies, anyway), the parents this
study's data indicate are most to blame for
their kids' bulging waistlines are those
characterized by the study's authors as
"authoritarian."
Predictably, these were described in so many
words as the "clean-up-your-plate"
crowd.
Funny, but what was known as
"authoritarian" when I was a kid were
the parents that told kids to go to bed WITHOUT
dinner. Keep reading...
What this study doesn't take into account at all
is the widely varying temperament of children.
Anyone with multiple kids knows that they can be
as different from each other as night and day.
What's this mean?
It means that maybe parents apply disciplinary
styles based on the inherent challenges of
individual children as much as imposing
preconceived notions of how to parent on those
same kids. In other words, maybe the harsher
parents are the way they are because their kids
present more of a challenge to guide...
Perhaps in this respect, "clean your
plate" means not spoiling a child into
believing they rule the roost and can pick and
choose what foods they want to eat. If I were
the parent of a young 'un today, given my own
dutiful attention to balanced diet, no child
would be allowed to leave the table WITHOUT
cleaning their plate.
But do you think that child of mine would be
obese?
My point is this: I wonder if the study's
authors controlled for this kind of thing in
their data. I seriously doubt it.
Now, I'm certainly not saying that a parent's
actions have no effect on children's eating
habits. Quite the contrary. Parents are the MOST
important influence for truly healthy eating
kids can have -- both by their example and by
their guidance. But to conclude that parental
discipline is the cause of excessive behavior
(overeating being just one example) rather than
an attempt to combat it is typical of the
American medical mainstream...
Backwards, in other words.
And despite how today's agenda-driven,
spare-the-rod pointy-heads try to spin the
facts, generations through American history show
us that people (kids, adults, everyone) are
fatter the less discipline they're subjected
to...
History proves it, too. I think anyone over the
age of 50 can see that the last few generations
of American children have, on the whole, lived
in an ever-more-permissive world -- much farther
removed from discipline, consequences, and
accountability for their own actions than every
other generation before them.
And they've gotten heavier with every passing
year. Remember?
Fighting fat -- and big fat lies,
William Campbell Douglass II, MD
Health Sciences Institute
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