
Katie told me she sometimes thinks about wanting to lose weight. The 14-year-old had started skipping lunch from time to time at school, and sometimes didn’t finish her dinner at home. I was assessing her for anxiety, but when a child discloses restricted eating, there’s a protocol: write down everything they’ve eaten over the last few days; ask if they ever feel dizzy; log any changes to their weight and get them checked out at the GP. It doesn’t matter if they’re not underweight; atypical anorexia exists. Katie was actually overweight, and always had been. Her desire to lose weight might not have been unhealthy — but the narrative that prevails in many schools pathologised it.
I work as part of an early intervention team that assesses children’s mental health, and I have noticed that teachers, parents and healthcare professionals seem increasingly terrified of talking to children about their weight. In many ways, this is understandable. Eating disorders in children are on the rise, with over 11,000 children and young people beginning treatment last year on the NHS (a figure that has more than doubled since 2016). And there is a common — if not always accurate — perception that they are triggered by body image issues.
The trouble is, we need to talk about children’s weight. Britain is experiencing an obesity crisis that is putting them at risk of lifelong illness. Last year, almost a quarter of children in Year 6 were considered obese. In the early Eighties, only 1% of children were obese. And in 2020, a third of UK teenagers began their adult lives with excess weight. It’s obvious but worth stating that obesity has all sorts of negative consequences, not only for children’s health but also their social lives. Obese young people are less physically active, for instance, missing out on opportunities to develop skills, relationships and strategies for managing their mental health. They are also more likely to develop type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure and liver disease at an early age.
And yet, the authorities responsible for children often seem far more comfortable discussing restricted eating than over-eating. This is a society-wide phenomenon, affecting adults as well as children. Healthcare professionals are routinely criticised for mentioning excess weight at check-ups. When Cancer Research publicised the well-established links between obesity and cancer, academics and activists attacked them for fat-shaming. And the body positivity movement preaches that you can be healthy at any size.
It’s easy to sympathise with the aims of this movement. Obese people do get treated unfairly, and often harshly, by society. They are more likely to be judged as lazy, weak-willed and unintelligent, and they earn less money. One of the reasons Katie, the 14-year-old I assessed, wanted to lose weight was that she had been bullied about being overweight in primary school. And when I met 12-year-old Leo, to work out why he was missing so much school, he told me he never came in on PE days because he would have to get changed in front of people. He is overweight, and worried about being teased.
Teachers at school, trying to do the right thing, told him not to let other people’s opinions get to him. But Leo was already doing this, to an extent. Even though he felt like people were looking at him, he told me he knew they probably weren’t. He admitted that insensitive comments definitely fed his anxieties, but said that he knew they were made in jest, and that nobody meant to hurt him with them. But still, Leo wanted to lose weight, and when he asked adults for help, all he got were platitudes, or at best a link to a healthy eating website. The odd rude comment may have been a problem, but adults in his life focused on them as the only problem, ignoring Leo’s entirely rational desire to be a healthy weight.
Two things can be true: overweight kids don’t want to be shamed for their weight, but they usually still want to lose it. Our increased awareness of body image issues is on the whole a positive thing — but it has created a tendency to catastrophise. We see restricted eating in children as disordered eating, and therefore believe it ought to be avoided at all costs. Parents can know their child is overweight and want to do something about it, but still be terrified that if they say anything, they might trigger lifelong insecurities, or even anorexia.
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