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Attention all mothers of daughters!
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A new study from sweden have found that girls who are underweight at the age of seven are more likely than who are larger to develop aggressive, harder to treat types of tumours when they get older
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Poodi, I'd like to see the study before I start worrying about that. It depends how wide the research was, what the evidence base is. I fear that the worry about children being underweight would frighten people into fattening up fit thin young children, whereas at the moment the fact that so many children are overweight is presenting them with far more potential problems in later life in terms of long term illnesses when they grow up. It all depends, too, on the scale of the underweight - how underweight does the child have to be in order for this risk to be exacerbated? Do you have a link?
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Chuck posted this a few days ago.....I think it's relevant to other papers and studies...(it's funny)
http://www.dananddan.com/?p=68
http://www.dananddan.com/?p=68
Tony's daughter was always thin as a rake, no matter how much she ate. She got breast cancer at 20 and was dead at 27 from metastatic breast cancer and cerebral metastases. But then cancer is something that has afflicted his family through the generations. I believe it's more to do with genetics than anything else.
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