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עמוד בית
Tue, 27.01.26

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January 2026
Shir Libman MD, Michal Vinker-Shuster MD, Zvi Perry MD PhD, Yonatan Yeshayahu MD MHA

Background: Recent guidelines have emphasized the importance of the diagnosis and treatment of obesity in all healthcare settings. However, obesity rarely appears as a chronic diagnosis during hospitalization, and there are few reports of targeted interventions.

Objective: To assess obesity-related diagnoses and interventions during pediatric acute hospitalization.

Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted in a pediatric ward. Hospitalization records of all patients aged 2–18 years were retrieved during a 30-month period. Weight percentile for patient age was calculated using the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) age- and sex-adjusted charts. Patients with a weight-percentile-for-age of ≥ 95% were classified as suspected obesity. The characteristics of obesity-diagnosed patients were compared to obesity-overlooked patients.

Results: Of the hospitalized patients, 245/2827 (8.6%) had weight-percentile-for-age of ≥ 95%. Of these, 91/245 (37.4%) had obesity-related references in their medical record; 65/245 (26.5%) had a mean body mass index of 97.66% ± 2.6. Only 38/245 (15.5%) were diagnosed with obesity; weight-related recommendations only appeared in the discharge letter for 44/245 (17.9%). Multivariate analysis indicated that obesity was significantly more overlooked in preschoolers than in adolescents (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 11.78, 95% confidence interval [95%CI] 4.71–29.42), P < 0.001) and in patients, regardless of age, whose chief complaint was not abdominal (OR 7.7, 95%CI 1.92–30.8, P = 0.004).

Conclusions: Low rates of obesity-related diagnoses during pediatric acute hospitalization, especially in younger patients, are frequent. Pediatric staff should note obesity in patients and be trained in non-stigmatizing intervention during hospitalization.

April 2021
Michal Vinker-Shuster MD, Ephraim S. Grossman PhD, and Yonatan Yeshayahu MD

Background: The coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) social-distancing strategy, including 7 weeks of strict lockdown, enabled an extraordinary test of stay-at-home regulations, which forced a sedentary lifestyle on all children and adolescents.

Objectives: To assess the lockdown effect on pediatric weight.

Methods: A retrospective-prospective cohort study at our hospital’s pediatric outpatient clinics following the COVID-19 lockdown. Patients aged 0–18 years visiting the clinic were weighed and previous weight and other clinical data were collected from the medical charts. Weight-percentile-for-age standardization was calculated according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization growth tables. Pre- and post-lockdown weight-percentiles-for-age were compared using paired t-test. Multivariate analysis was conducted using linear regression model.

Results: The study was comprised of 229 patients; 117/229 (51.1%) were boys, 60/229 (26.2%) aged under 6 years. Total mean weight-percentile was significantly higher following the lockdown (40.44 vs. 38.82, respectively, P = 0.029). Boys had a significant post-lockdown weight-percentile rise (37.66 vs. 34.42, P = 0.014), whereas girls had higher baseline pre-quarantine weight-percentile of 43.42, which did not change. Patients younger than 6 years had a significant increase in weight-percentiles (39.18 vs. 33.58, P = 0.021). In multivariate analysis these correlations were preserved.

Conclusions: A general weight gain among children was noted, especially in boys during the lockdown, with substantial effect under the age of 6 years. This collateral side-effect should be considered in further quarantine regulations

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