"As a parent, you don't want to be telling your child, 'You shouldn't be eating that, you should make a different choice,'" said Christian's mom, Lisa Naslund.
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Naslund lost over 40 pounds through Weight Watchers but it didn't seem fun enough to interest kids.
A web search took her to Kurbo, which offers food and fitness tracking, plus weekly coaching sessions via Skype or FaceTime with a health professional.
"He can see what he is eating. He can see if he's not tracking," Naslund said about Christian's coach.
"We're seeing 88 percent of our kids that do Kurbo are able to reduce their BMI percentiles, which is fantastic. Fifty percent of parents lose weight as well," said Kurbo's co-founder Thea Runyon.
Runyon, formerly of Stanford's Childrens Hospital, said the company uses diet guidelines loosely aligned with a diabetes prevention program and the Traffic Light Diet.
"Increase green foods; moderate yellow foods, whole grains, lean proteins; reduce red foods, soda and sugary things," said Runyon.
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Christian is catching on and liking it.
"I read the label and it says sugars right here and if it's below 6 grams, it's OK," he said.
Christian hasn't lost any weight but Lisa isn't worried because a couple of real positive things are happening.
One, he's learning great habits for life -- portion control and good foods. And they also know he's growing. Eventually, his weight and his BMI will lower.
"We're seeing improved self-esteem. We're seeing kids are feeling better, we're seeing that they're reporting that there's less fighting and arguments in the household," said Runyon.
The average family stays with Kurbo for five months. A single month with coaching is $85. There are cost breaks on three and six-month plans.