To the submitter who was being warned about childhood obesity: unfortunately, fatphobia is weirdly rife among pre- and ante-natal medical professionals (at least where I come from). I am the oldest of 5 children and have been watching babies be taken to doctors’ surgeries, weighed, commented on etc all my life. I also come from a family of big babies, all of whom grew up to be healthy and coincidentally average (if not below average) sized children. Of all 5 of us, the only one ever to suffer any kind of weight-related health complications as a baby was one of my brothers, who became dangerously underweight during his first couple of weeks home from the hospital and almost died (I’m not exaggerating here - the doctor who came to check on him said he would have about 3 hours left if they didn’t do anything). Yet all 5 of us were described by doctors as “solid” or “a bit heavy” despite the fact that it’s widely encouraged to make sure that newborn babies put on weight in case they become ill etc. To clarify, none of us were ever fat (not that this would change anything, just to illustrate the extent of this paranoia) - aged 6, I weighed 25kg at a height of about 4'1" and was “fairly stocky”, while the same fatphobia allowed doctors to overlook the fact that my brother (not the same one as before!) was such a “fussy eater” that he was no longer able to eat anything other than pasta and weighed about 15kg (aged 5).