Weight Watchers' Controversial New Focus: Teens
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Those concerns are seconded by other health experts, among them Tomi Akanbi, clinical nutrition coordinator at the Mount Sinai Adolescent Health Center. Akanbi sees patients who take up their parents’ weight-loss programs, not realizing that they need to eat certain foods for proper growth and development.
For its part, Weight Watchers said in a statement to CNBC “our decision to open our program to teens, with the consent of a parent or guardian, is driven by a family-based approach. This is not about encouraging dieting, but rather helping teens to form healthy habits at this critical life stage.
We are engaging and look forward to dialogue with health care professionals as we roll out this program in a few months.”
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