Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Being Harsh On Your Kids Makes Them Fat

IANS, 24 Apr, 2016 02:34 PM
    Are you an authoritative parent? A new study has found that harsh parenting may increase a child's risk of obesity and poor physical health in adulthood.
     
    According to researchers, attempts by one parent to counterbalance the harsh behaviour are not always effective in lessening that risk.
     
    "Harshness leads to problems with physical health and no matter how hard a spouse tries, they may not be able to erase those effects," said lead study author Thomas Schofield from Iowa State University in the US.
     
    "Instead of saying, 'I'm the law and my wife is the gospel' or something like that, better to acknowledge that in terms of harshness, your spouse is not going to be a buffer for the child, so behave responsibly," Schofield added in the paper, published in Social Science and Medicine.
     
    Researchers videotaped the interactions of 451 two-parent families to assess parenting behaviour and look at changes in the child's health several years later from adolescence to young adulthood.
     
    However, when they measured the effect on body mass index, the health risk of harsh parenting increased as warmth from the other parent increased.
     
    No parent in this sample was observed hitting their adolescent, but Schofield said there were other signs of physical aggression, such as pinching and pushing.
     
    The results indicated that the differences in physical health and BMI were not evident at the beginning of adolescence. The effects persisted into young adulthood after many had moved out of their parents' homes
     
    This exposure can have a lasting effect on the developing brain during childhood and early adolescence, he added.
     
    "The best thing we can do is encourage parents to not be harsh. If we want to make sure we're protecting children's health and positive physical health into young adulthood, the best and safest conclusion is to avoid being harsh," Schofield advised.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    B.C. Report Says Closed-minded Government Probe Led To Health Workers' Firings

    B.C. Report Says Closed-minded Government Probe Led To Health Workers' Firings
    VICTORIA — A B.C. government investigation that prompted the firings or suspensions of seven health researchers failed to follow existing procedures and reached premature conclusions, a labour lawyer says.

    B.C. Report Says Closed-minded Government Probe Led To Health Workers' Firings

    Bikini Round Now Removed From Miss World Pageant

    Bikini Round Now Removed From Miss World Pageant
    The Miss World contest, which has been an annual feature since 1951, will no longer feature a swimsuit round in their competition, the organisation's chairwoman Julia Morley has said.

    Bikini Round Now Removed From Miss World Pageant

    Calorie Labels For Alcoholic Drinks Will Be On The Menu - But Not At The Bar

    Calorie Labels For Alcoholic Drinks Will Be On The Menu - But Not At The Bar
    WASHINGTON — Don't want to be confronted with the number of calories in that margarita or craft beer? Then avoid the menu and order at the bar.

    Calorie Labels For Alcoholic Drinks Will Be On The Menu - But Not At The Bar

    Microbial 'signatures' can nab sexual offenders

    Microbial 'signatures' can nab sexual offenders
    Bacterial communities living on an individual's pubic hairs could be used as a microbial "signature" to trace his involvement in sexual assault cases, say Australian researchers....

    Microbial 'signatures' can nab sexual offenders

    Know how cows communicate with their calves

    Know how cows communicate with their calves
    Cows use individualised calls to communicate with each other, a study that identified particular types of mother-offspring contact calls in cattle has showed....

    Know how cows communicate with their calves

    The Cult Of Culture: Merriam-webster Names 'Culture' Its 2014 Word Of The Year

    The Cult Of Culture: Merriam-webster Names 'Culture' Its 2014 Word Of The Year
    NEW YORK — A nation, a workplace, an ethnicity, a passion, an outsized personality. The people who comprise these things, who fawn or rail against them, are behind Merriam-Webster's 2014 word of the year: culture.

    The Cult Of Culture: Merriam-webster Names 'Culture' Its 2014 Word Of The Year