Should extremely obese children be taken into care?

Does allowing a child to become morbidly obese qualify as child abuse? Some health and social care professionals believe it is a question that needs to be considered more seriously.

Just a few months ago, the town of Aberdare in South Wales, was the scene of a dramatic rescue.

A 19-year-old girl was pulled from her house by a crew of fire fighters – not because of a fire, but because she weighed more than 50 stone (318kg).

The girl needed urgent medical treatment but could not fit through the front door of her house and so a wall was knocked down so she could be taken to hospital.

Medics and social workers were on standby to give the girl much needed support, but the question some people have asked is why social workers did not take preventative measures – such as taking the girl into care when she was younger – before such extreme action was needed?

The question of whether extreme obesity is a child protection issue is a sensitive subject, but one which is gaining traction with some health and social care professionals.

“It is my view that child obesity should be treated as a form of child mistreatment, as any type of under-feeding is,” says Joanna Nicholas, a child protection consultant who has been a social worker for 17 years.

“If a child is obese it is a form of abuse because of the physical impact on the child, the implications for their future health and the psychological impact,” she told Radio 4’s The Report.

“We hear time and time again that these children just don’t go out anymore. They stay at home eating because they are so miserable that nobody wants to be their friend.”

Ms Nicholas has personally dealt with six child protection cases where child obesity was a significant factor.

“In one case the parents were both clinically obese and their view was that there wasn’t a problem and we were sticking our noses in,” she says.

“Initially the child was placed on the child protection register and help and support was in place, but because of the family’s unwillingness to accept there was a problem, we ended up going to court… and a decision was made by the court that the child should be removed from the parents’ care.”

A big decision

There are no official figures on how many children have been taken into care where obesity has been a deciding factor.

This is because hearings at the family court are rarely reported due to restrictions. Although local authorities have a duty to collect data on care proceedings, obesity cases are usually logged under the more general category of neglect.
Builders cut a hole in the wall of the home of a 60 stone teenager Builders cut a hole in the wall of the home of a 60 stone teenager in order to take her to hospital

So how do social workers decide child obesity is a protection issue in the first place? What guidelines do they use to decide that a child’s weight problem is so serious that they should be taken into care?

“The key criteria is whether the harm is significant in terms of the child’s development and whether the harm is due to the parents or care-givers behaviour,” says Colin Green from the Association of Directors of Children’s Services.

“You would also be looking to medical colleagues to help you with that assessment as social worker training is not really competent to judge health impact in precise terms,” he adds.

The Report has learned that the interpretation of these guidelines varies considerably from one local authority to the next.

As far as we know, the case of the 50-plus stone Welsh teenager never made it to court but there have been much less extreme cases where councils did start care proceedings.

The amount of time social workers give families to tackle a child’s weight problem also varies wildy. In one case, an authority waited five years before taking action, another threatened action after a few months. So why are social workers so inconsistent?

“There will be variability because the circumstances of every child are significantly different,” says Colin Green.

“You can’t just follow a rubric that a child with a certain Body Mass Index means it’s a child protection issue.”

But surely a better steer for social workers would ensure a more consistent approach across the country?

“I think the guidance is very clear,” says Mr Green. “I think social workers need to ask for less guidance and be more focussed on the exercise of professional judgment.”