Obesity News Online |
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Childhood Obesity: The Epidemic By Dawn MillerRead information about Obesity News Online at simplifiedweightloss.com. The following article, "Childhood Obesity: The Epidemic By Dawn Miller", is here for you to read free of charge and is written for the Obesity News Online network. simplifiedweightloss.com gathers all the relative Obesity News Online and brings it to you in a one-stop shop atmosphere. Thank you for choosing Obesity News Online for your obesity news and information. Tonight I took the easy way out – a family classic – hot dogs and frozen French fries for dinner. A neglected salad graced the table and no one ate it. On the snack shelf, the raisins, fruit, peanuts, rice cakes and cereal bars sit neglected. I think I’m doing a good job by getting the kids to drink milk instead of soda at a meal. But the reality is that we – as in we the American family/stepfamily – are surrendering our youth to a silent epidemic – childhood obesity. Statistically 30% of children and adolescents ages 6-19 are overweight and 16% are obese. Half of today’s kids don’t get regular physical exercise. The end result – thousands of kids enter adulthood, overweight, out of shape, and carrying entrenched bad habits. So who’s going to do something about it? Child advocacy and nutrition groups have generated a litany of protest and appeals for schools, the government and families to do something about it. All their noise is starting to pay off in legislative activity at state and national levels, as well as local grassroots activities. President Bush’s budget includes $39 million for a USDA project to get kids eating better foods. School districts are booting vending machines off-campus and administrators are adding healthier alternatives to school lunch menus. In Philadelphia, Penn., the school district stripped unhealthy items and sugared sodas off its approved snack lists. The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that a serving of homemade chocolate-chip cookies has plummeted from 492 to 164 calories. School districts in Texas, Chicago and Washington, DC set limits for calories and certain ingredients, resulting in portion sizes plummeting. Parent-teacher groups are establishing healthy snack programs. In Georgia, the Houston County High School Parent Teacher Student Association applied for a grant to establish a snack shack. The shack will cater to students who normally munch their lunch out of the vending machines and avoid the cafeteria lines. But the reality is that many of our kids today learned their bad eating and exercise habits at home – from us. It starts with our convenience consumer culture. If you’re like me, you often feel like time is slipping away from you, dribbling down your fingers into a puddle. To save time you cut corners – you go for frozen instead of fresh, packaged instead of homemade, French fries instead of baked potatoes and fast food instead of homemade. Children emulate what they see – and many of us, full-grown adults - use food to avoid stress, opt for fast food or takeout instead of cooking in because it’s easier, and allow scheduling hassles to trump our bloated hopes for fitness. We can model good eating habits, portion control and physical activity for our children and stepchildren - but it's not always easy. With children shuffling between both homes – there is added room for conflict over nutrition in stepfamilies. A child can play a stricter home off the more lax one – what stepparent or custodial parent hasn’t heard, “I always get ___________ (insert favorite non-healthy food) at my Mom/Dad’s house”? Conflict over a child’s eating habits or weight can cause more tension between households. The solution to the childhood obesity epidemic is not going to be easy, nor will it be solved overnight. Parents, stepparents, youth, schools, support organizations and government agencies all need to work together to combat this problem. Only together can we beat it. How To Stop Childhood Obesity. - Website promoting book explaining how to prevent and overcome obesity in childhood. The Ultimate Parent Guide. - Child health, fitness and nutrition eBook to help concerned parents fight childhood obesity. A thirty-something wife and stepmom of three, Dawn Miller writes a column on life in blended families at http://www.thestepfamilylife.com Article Index: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
OTHER ARTICLES
Knowing the Cause is Key to Beating Obesity By Tim Gorman Being obese is more than carrying around excess body fat. If your doctor has diagnosed you as obese, you know you need to lose weight or you will face serious health problems down the road. But could a medical condition be the cause of your obesity in the first place?Many medical conditions and even some medications can cause people to put on weight, and the problem could go on so long that the person could even become obese. Glandular malfunctions of the pituitary gland or the thyroid glan… Obesity Research – What Drives the Effort By Carlo Morelli Obesity increases a person’s risk for gallstone formation, high blood pressure and diabetes, as well as cancers of the breast, endometrium, colon, kidney, and oesophagus. These are some of the reasons why world health officials are putting more money into obesity research and making sure that they get the information that they need to provide us with new ways to battle the new worldwide epidemic that is evolving. Obesity research is crucial in telling us what the root causes of obesity are a… Childhood Obesity: Your Kids And Heart Disease! By Ray Kelly Shockingly, it is estimated that 22 million of the world's children under 5 are overweight or obese and approximately one in four American children are overweight. The problem this presents is that these children are more susceptible to pediatric hypertension, type II diabetes, greater risk of heart disease, the extra burden of weight on joints, not to mention, the social effects with peers. The medical community has already indicated a surge in childhood diabetes and of the children diagnosed… Cause and Solution to Obesity By Soline Dibez ObesityToday, 64.5 percent of adult Americans (about 127 million) are categorized as being overweight or obese. Each year, obesity causes at least 300,000 excess deaths in the U.S., and healthcare costs of American adults with obesity amount to approximately $100 billion. Apart from the obvious physical symptoms of being very large in size and unable to partake in normal activities such as sport, obesity increases one's risk of developing conditions such as high blood pressure, diabet… The Commerce of Obesity By Dr Joseph Mercola In an interview with Pam Killeen of Crusador, Dr. Marion Nestle, noted food expert and author of Food Politics and Safe Food, reveals some interesting facts about the marketing of junk foods that have led to the obesity epidemic, including:The appalling American diet may be, in part, collateral damage from having a food supply that provides 3,900 available calories for every man, woman, and child, resulting in a hypercompetitive marketSugary breakfast cereals, even those advertising themselves… |
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