Obese Girls Prone to Poorer Grades, Study Suggests
Researchers found weight at age 11 linked to academic success.
Besides the well-known problems associated with being overweight at a young age, a new study suggests that obese teen girls tend to do worse in school than those with a healthy weight.
Researchers analyzed data from nearly 6,000 children in the United Kingdom and found that girls who were obese at age 11 had lower academic scores at ages 11, 13 and 16 than those with a normal weight.
The overall average grade in English, math and science was a C, but the average grade among obese girls was a D. The link between obesity and school grades was less clear in boys, according to the study.
The investigators took into account other possible factors -- such as mental health, IQ, social and economic status, and the start of the menstrual cycle. But they found that those factors did not affect the link between obesity and school performance in girls.
Further work is needed to understand why obesity is negatively related to academic attainment. But it is clear that teenagers, parents and policymakers in education and public health should be aware of the lifelong educational and economic impact of obesity.
In addition, researcher said: "There is a clear pattern which shows that girls who are in the obese range are performing more poorly than their counterparts in the healthy weight range throughout their teenage years."
Source: HealthDay News
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