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St. Louis doctors react to new childhood obesity guidelines
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ST. LOUIS – New guidance from the American Academy of Pediatrics says physicians should be more proactive when it comes to treating childhood obesity.
“We are encountering more and more kids who have severe obesity,” Dr. Jennifer Sprague, a Washington University pediatric endocrinologist at St. Louis Children’s Hospital, said. “Many of whom are getting complications from obesity that we used to think of only as adult diseases.”
Children are now dealing with diseases such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, sleep apnea, and Type 2 Diabetes. This isn’t just a problem across the bi-state region. Around 15 million children and teens nationwide are obese. This means they have a body mass index that meets or exceeds the 95th percentile for kids of the same age.
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“I’m really excited about these new guidelines,” Sprague said. “I think they take on much broader perspective at taking care of kids with obesity.”
The previous childhood obesity guidelines focused almost exclusively on lifestyle changes. However, the first new ones the AAP has released in 15 years have more advanced options including medication and weight loss surgery. Sprague is on-board with them, but another physician we spoke with thinks the guidance is too aggressive of an approach.
“I think childhood obesity is a large problem in our country, and there are many ways to approach it. I think some of the radical approaches may be too radical,” said Dr. Tim Staed, who works in pediatric emergency medicine.
As a father too, he has some concerns.
“There are risks involved with surgery,” he said. “I think lifestyle changes and certainly medications are appropriate, surgeries are something you need to give a lot of thought to.”
But Dr. Sprauge thinks will give her more options to better treat her patients, instead of the gradual, staged approach recommended in the past.
“Lifestyle itself rarely is going to make a big enough difference to improve those problems, versus if you think about doing bariatric surgery, weight loss surgery in those patients, sometimes we can cure those diseases or we can at least make them less severe,” she said.
You can read more about the new AAP obesity guidelines here.
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Man attacks Jeff Co. deputy with screwdriver during attempted arrest
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JEFFERSON COUNTY, Mo. – Two people are behind bars after a man reportedly attacked a Jefferson County deputy with a screwdriver during an attempted arrest over the weekend.
Prosecutors have charged Nicholas Davis, 47, and Amanda Davis, 45, of Dittmer, Missouri, with felonies in the investigation.
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The alleged attack followed a traffic stop of a driver in the 9500 block of Jones Creek Road on July 7, though the driver was not Nicholas or Amanda.
According to court documents obtained by FOX 2, Nicholas reportedly came out of his nearby home, yelled at a deputy and started approaching him while holding a screwdriver. The deputy initially ordered Nicholas to back away, then used pepper spray.
Per court documents, the deputy attempted to arrest Nicholas, who then struck him in the chest with the screwdriver. Amanda reportedly approached the deputy and pulled him away from Nicholas before both ran inside their home.
The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office says the situation prompted an hours-long standoff involving negotiators, a SWAT team and a K-9 deputy. The situation led to Nicholas refusing warnings and being bitten by a K-9.
Nicholas and Amanda are both jailed in the Jefferson County Jail without bond. Nicholas is charged with first-degree assault on a special victim and armed criminal action. Amanda is charged with resisting/interfering with arrest.
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St. Louis Public Schools superintendent to be sworn in
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ST. LOUIS — The new St. Louis schools superintendent will be officially sworn into office today. Dr. Keisha Scarlett took over the job in July after the retirement of Dr. Kelvin Adams. She was assistant superintendent in the Seattle Public School District. The installation ceremony is at 6:15 p.m. before the regular school board meeting.
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Gas tanker crashes into St. Louis Metro transit center
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ST. LOUIS — A gasoline tanker truck crashed into a Metro transit center near Riverview and Hall Streets early Tuesday morning and knocked over a power pole. The pole is leaning on other power lines. Police have the area blocked off here because there is a downed power line. Ameren and Metro crews are also on the scene.
The incident happened around 12:30 a.m. It’s still unclear exactly what caused the crash, but we do that there was a second vehicle somehow involved. The airbags on that second vehicle did deploy.
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Police at the scene have not been able to give us a lot of details. Metro officials tell FOX 2 that the transit center here is operating this morning for passengers and buses. Access to certain areas will be limited here as clean up unfolds.
A Metro spokesperson says half of the station isn’t being used right now because of safety issues. It isn’t impacting overall bus operations, everything is just happening on the other side of transit center.
The extent of the damage to the actual transit center is still unclear, but I’m told it does not appear to be extreme. A Metro spokesperson tells me there were no injuries to any metro workers or passengers. The tanker driver also was not injured.
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