Obese child "could be taken into care"
LONDON, Feb 27 (Reuters) The mother of a 14-stone eight-year-old boy, who could be taken into care because of his weight, has defended her refusal to stop feeding him junk food.
Single mum Nicola McKeown says her son Connor McCreaddie refuses to eat healthy foods, such as fruit and vegetables.
''He likes processed foods and if I try him with any salad, vegetables, fruit, he just refuses to eat it or spits it out,'' she told BBC Radio yesterday.
''When a child won't eat anything else, you've got to feed them what they like.'' The 35-year-old mum -- who has sought help to try to reduce Connor's weight -- rejected a suggestion that she put a lock on the fridge.
''I wouldn't go that far,'' she said. ''That's not the way to do it, starving your child.'' However, Connor has lost one-and-a-half stone following advice from health workers and a dietician at the start of the year.
The family, from Wallsend, Newcastle, face a child protection conference with North Tyneside Council today.
The last resort would be for social workers to put him into care, but McKeown is confident she can help her son lose weight.
The schoolboy will feature in Monday's edition of ''Tonight with Trevor McDonald'', exploring childhood obesity.
Former Olympic runner Roger Black said Connor's case was ''very extreme'' -- but that it highlighted the need for exercise to be pushed higher up the school agenda.
''What's interesting for me, and everything I've read over the weekend about this issue, it's always been about diet; it's about what he (Connor) eats. There's no mention of exercise,'' he told the BBC.
''Many, many children in this country are growing up doing very, very little exercise and if you create a culture of young children not used to doing exercise on a daily basis then these problems do happen.'' Black has recently spent a term in an inner London comprehensive school to try to encourage 12-year-olds to become more active as part of the run-up to the 2012 Olympics.
''The project I've just been involved with is not about creating Olympic medallists for 2012, it's about encouraging young people to do more exercise in school time,'' he added.
''It
absolutely
should
be
compulsory
that
children
do
more
exercise
than
our
children
are
doing
now,
because
it
is
staggering
that
some
children
in
this
country
are
doing
less
than
an
hour's
exercise
a
week
in
school.''
REUTERS
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