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Information
on childhood obesity.
CHILDHOOD OBESITY
In January
2005, U.S. Surgeon General Richard Carmona,
proclaimed this “The Year of the Healthy Child”.
Of course, there are numerous reasons that the
U.S. is so focused on the health of the younger
population; birth defects, drowning accidents,
broken bones are among a few, but none is
growing as fast as the alarmingly increasing
number of obese children.
Childhood
obesity is a major concern in our nation these
days. The news highlights stories of obese four
year olds, unable to play with other children
their age without stopping from shear
overexertion. The newspapers produce story after
story of the decreased physical activity level
of the nation’s children, of our youngster’s
eating habits and of the dangerous health
problems surfacing in young children, normally
only seen in adults.
OBESITY
AND CHILDREN
The crisis is getting a lot of
attention; however, there is a still mountain of education that needs to be
disseminated and solutions that need to be implemented before the epidemic
will begin to abate. The first thing that must be defined in this situation
is, “when is a child obese and when is he or she merely overweight?”
A
national survey conducted in 1999, called the Youth Risk Behavioral Surveillance
Study (YRBSS) sponsored by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
showed that 16 percent of high school students were considered to be overweight
while 10 percent fell into the obese category. In the study, overweight was
defined as having a body mass index (BMI) greater than the 85th percentile but
less than the 95th percentile, while an obese student was one with a BMI more
than or equal to the 95th percentile.
Obesity is not an equal opportunity disease. In fact, the statistics found
during the study were very unbalanced. More male students than female were found
to be obese, more black than white students, and more black and Hispanic female
students than white female students.
In a culture that reveres thinness and fitness; obese children live in a very
alienated world. Almost 50% of teens polled were found to have tried at least
one type of diet to lose the excess weight. The problem here is that most diets
used were based more on starvation techniques than healthy, nutritional food
choices and increased activity levels.
Solutions are hard to come by, as the reasons for being overweight and obese are
complex. Obesity in our young children stems from unhealthy food choices, lack
of physical exercise and increased sedentary activities. Many of these begin
with a lack of education in nutrition and health both from the school system and
from the parents, who in many cases are uneducated in nutrition and physical
fitness as well. In fact, many schools, in looking for ways to make cost cuts in
their budgets, have ceased physical education (PE) classes, while others, in an
attempt to boost time in the classrooms and thus, hopefully, standardized test
scores, have cut back on recess breaks for children.
In addition to the changes that the school system has made, our society seems to
be more dangerous for children these days. Abductions, shootings, and rapes
abound according to the media. Many parents, especially if they are living in a
neighborhood with inflated crime rates, or who are at work when their children
arrive home from school, understandably, don’t allow their young ones to leave
the house unaccompanied by an adult. In many cases for these children, their
activities are confined to the in-doors and usually include sedentary
entertainment – TV, computer, video games, and of course, the favorite American
past-time, snacking.
As the Surgeon General has noted, there must be change, and it must start now in
order for the nation’s youth to develop into healthy, prospering adults. There
are no clear cut answers, but getting involved in your community, volunteering
to help out at school, and at after school programs, designing outdoor
activities chaperoned by caring and mature adults, mentoring children with
weight issues, these are all ways that each concerned citizen can help take a
step in the right direction.
Children and Obesity
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