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Pint-Size Pounds --- How to Prevent America's Growing Problem — Childhood Obesity
ABC News ^ | 07/30/03 | Daniel Ling

Posted on 07/30/2003 7:14:57 AM PDT by bedolido

Once again, the ranks of overweight children are on the rise.

According to the latest report from the National Institutes of Health, although almost every indicator of adolescent health has improved over the last 10 years, America's youth continue to get heavier — to the tune of an estimated 9 million overweight children.

What can you do about this junior obesity crisis?

Here's a countdown of the top 10 tips from experts on how to prevent your child from putting on too many pounds.

10. A Healthy Beginning

The key to getting through the day is to start off on the right foot. According to Tammy Baker, spokesperson for the American Dietetic Association, "[Breakfast] helps us spread our calories out throughout the day. In addition, if breakfast is skipped it is more likely that junk will be consumed mid-morning when hunger hits."

Studies have consistently found that kids who eat breakfast are less likely to be overweight. But be sure to say no to sugary cereals and other unhealthy foods in the morning — those will only pack on the pounds.

9. Breast Feed Your Baby

Studies have shown that breast-fed babies are significantly less likely to be obese by the time they become teenagers.

Dr. David Katz, director of the Yale Prevention Research Center in New Haven and author of several books on nutrition, advises mothers to "encourage breast feeding — it appears to lend lasting protection against obesity."

Maternal milk is also believed to convey a host of other medical benefits and provides substantial savings on formula, opening the door for an initial investment in fitness equipment.

8. Encourage Healthy Habits at School

Schools may focus on history and science in the classroom, but they also teach children important lessons about diet and nutrition. Fried foods and vending machines full of soda and candy bars lead adolescents to worse overall dietary habits, while regular physical education classes keep students active.

Katz admonishes school boards for not doing more to promote healthy eating. "With bad eating habits hurting our children more than tobacco, it's time to draw a line that surrounds our schools, and defend it against junk food invasion."

7. Use Moderation in Meals

It may be unrealistic to expect your children to become health-food nuts — instead, teach them to eat less healthy foods in moderation, and try to substitute snacks such as fruits and yogurt for cookies and chips. In particular, limit foods high in saturated fat such as fast food, donuts, and packaged snacks.

As Keith-Thomas Ayoob, a professor at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, puts it, "Set some healthy limits and enforce them. It's not about good foods or bad foods, it's about how much and how often. The answer is usually less of it and less often."

6. Family Time = Healthier Time

Eating at home with your family often translates into a healthier diet. Home-cooked meals usually have less fat, sugar, and salt, and better-sized portions than restaurant food.

Studies have also shown that adolescent nutrition is significantly correlated with the frequency of family meals. Children are much more likely to eat fruits, vegetables, and dairy products when dining regularly with their parents.

"Eating meals as a family models healthy family behavior and promotes healthier food choices than random food pick-ups from various fast-food and snack food choices," says Dr. James Anderson, director of the metabolic research group and professor of clinical nutrition at the University of Kentucky in Lexington.

5. Count Your Liquid Calories

People tend to be less careful about monitoring the nutrition content of beverages, but the fact is most of our drinks are loaded with calories and sugar.

Dr. Terry Maratos-Flier, professor at Harvard Medical School in Boston, cautions against the misconception that liquid calories are less meaningful: "[We need to] teach kids that drinks are calories, too. Orange juice and apple juice have the same number of calories as most sodas per ounce. Just because you drink the calories doesn't mean they don't count."

To control your liquid calorie intake, substitute low-calorie drinks such as water or low-fat milk for soda and punch. Eat actual fruits instead of drinking fruit juices, which tend to contain large amounts of sugar.

4. Exercise Prudence in Portions

Children are not simply smaller versions of adults — they need kid-sized portions for meals. Children who overeat and are forced to clean their plates are doing their bodies a disservice.

Baker emphasizes regulating quantity is a must: "Give children choices but control portions and what comes in to the home. … Bringing only healthy foods into the house and giving children appropriate portions helps them learn what is healthy but still allows choice."

3. Cut Screen Time

Katz characterizes sitting in front of the television as a "triple whammy." Not only does watching TV not burn calories, but it also reduces children's physical activity and exposes them to commercials for high-calorie junk foods.

Research has shown that watching more television is associated with a greater risk of obesity and diabetes. Cutting time from the TV and computer will encourage children to exercise more and lounge around less.

2. Get a Move On

This is a no-brainer — physical activity is a must in any dietary program. Your child should have plenty of time for exercise after easing up on the video games, so try to plan family activities such as hiking and bike riding.

Baker advises parents, "Walk the walk. Activity is an important part of preventing obesity." Katz agrees: "Families should make shared activity a priority."

Swimming lessons, sports leagues, or even just walking instead of driving from place to place are all good ideas for staying in shape.

1. Nutrition Begins and Ends in the Home

Children pick up their habits from their parents and typically eat what is provided for them. Parents decide what types of foods are available in the household and act as role models for their children.

Anderson recommends parents pay attention to their food choices. "[Children] are likely to make healthy food choices if they see this modeled by their parents and are offered a wide variety of healthy choices and almost no unhealthy choices."

Katz concurs: "Children are very much influenced by the examples their parents set. … We can and should do much better, making healthful eating a practice that families share every day."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: americas; childhood; childhoodobesity; growing; obesity; parenting; pintsize; pounds; prevent; problem
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America's children are becoming increasingly overweight. Experts explain how to promote healthy eating and living habits in your household

1 posted on 07/30/2003 7:14:58 AM PDT by bedolido
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To: bedolido
call me crazy but this list can be summed up pretty simply with the phrase: "KIDS LESS LIKLY TO BE FAT IF PARENTS PARENT!!!"
2 posted on 07/30/2003 7:17:53 AM PDT by KantianBurke (The Federal govt should be protecting us from terrorists, not handing out goodies)
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To: bedolido
Two parent familes
One parent home with the kids
Dad working mom at home
Back when America was truly a better place to live
3 posted on 07/30/2003 7:18:33 AM PDT by joesnuffy (Moderate Islam Is For Dilettantes)
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To: bedolido
I agree it starts at home, but the school lunch program promotes the high-fat milk, and they count french fries & ketchup as a vegetable. The typical menu is gross, and if I ate that diet, my doctor would shoot me. Grilled cheese, hot dogs (yuck)pizza, no wonder they are fat.
4 posted on 07/30/2003 7:19:00 AM PDT by ctlpdad (How much does being a full time Viking Kitty pay?)
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To: bedolido
We went to an outdoor antiques fair this past weekend and I was just shocked at all the children who were clearly old enough to walk (7+) who were in strollers and wagons!! All of these children had much more then "baby fat" on them, too.
5 posted on 07/30/2003 7:20:31 AM PDT by retrokitten (That Simpson. He thinks he's the Pope of Chili Town.)
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To: retrokitten
We went to an outdoor antiques fair this past weekend and I was just shocked at all the children who were clearly old enough to walk (7+) who were in strollers and wagons!!

I have seen a lot of that too! What is it? Parental laziness? Easier to strap em in and roll em around than it is to watch after them?

6 posted on 07/30/2003 7:25:39 AM PDT by Huck
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To: KantianBurke
"KIDS LESS LIKLY TO BE FAT IF PARENTS PARENT!!!"

Totally. You know, these parents are the children of boomers. A lot of stuff coming home to roost if you ask me. My parents were pretty lax. But I was fortunate enough to live with my Grandma for a while, and I learned a lot. Wish I'd had that sort of upbringing all along. Anyway, she put the food on the table and you ate it. There was no debate about what I liked or didn't like. Here it is, eat it. Makes perfect sense to me. It's not a restaurant. It's a family, and the parent should be setting the rules. Boy, it made those occasional stops at Wendy's a REAL treat, too! Turnip greens will do that.

7 posted on 07/30/2003 7:29:41 AM PDT by Huck
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To: ctlpdad
The school lunch and breakfast programs serve too many carbs, and I don't mean complex carbs!

Most of what is offered is made with bleached white flour. I predict that if this practice continues, we will have an epidemic of diabetes and hypoglycemia in schoolchildren in addition to the weight issues.

8 posted on 07/30/2003 7:36:06 AM PDT by pubmom
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To: Huck
The menu in schools now is no different then when I went to school.( late 60s) The big difference is kids back then were much more active.No play stations, internet.There was nothing to watch on TV between 3pm and 8pm we had nothing to do but play outside.
9 posted on 07/30/2003 7:39:17 AM PDT by since1868
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To: bedolido
Good lord. QUIT STUFFING THEIR DAMN FACES. problem solved.
10 posted on 07/30/2003 7:42:00 AM PDT by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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To: since1868
Yup, in the summer mom would kick us out into the yard all day. Call us back for dinner. The only way to grow up.
11 posted on 07/30/2003 7:44:50 AM PDT by BMiles2112
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To: pubmom
As Keith-Thomas Ayoob, a professor at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, puts it, "Set some healthy limits and enforce them. It's not about good foods or bad foods, it's about how much and how often. The answer is usually less of it and less often."

What a dumb "Einstein" prof! Read Dr. Atkin's "New Diet Revolution" and you would see where the problem is: CARBOs (= BAD foods)! The liberal idiots and media are guilty for poisoning the nation with their "no fat, no cholesterol, vegetarian" crap. Eat meat, play ball and sports and be healthy. God Rest Dr. Atkins and his soul!

12 posted on 07/30/2003 7:45:28 AM PDT by Leo Carpathian
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To: bedolido
Pint-Size Pounds --- How to Prevent America's Growing Problem — Childhood Obesity

It takes a village.

13 posted on 07/30/2003 7:46:57 AM PDT by biblewonk (Spose to be a Chrisssssssstian)
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To: bedolido
Restrict computer and TV time to one hour per day. Kick the kids out the door. They'll find something to do and burn off some calories.
14 posted on 07/30/2003 7:47:16 AM PDT by George W. Bush
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To: bedolido
I have a thought.

Stop feeding kids processed snack foods, "fruit" roll-ups, and drinks high in sugar. Our fitness was better when we ate natural foods like meats, vegetables, and whole grains.

Get kids away from the playstation, the computer, and the televison and get them outdoors and involved in physical activities like swimming, dance, and little league sports.

Stop looking for legislation to solve all the ills of American health, because that is not going to happen. Government can only make things worse by taking away freedom of choice. Once parents take responsibility for raising their children and assuring them of a healthy start in life, things will be much better for society.

Discredit the vegan lifestyle. Has anyone ever seen a healthy looking person that claims to be on that diet? Those I have seen are all pale, sickly looking, and all bones.

15 posted on 07/30/2003 7:47:19 AM PDT by SaveTheChief
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To: SaveTheChief
Discredit the vegan lifestyle. Has anyone ever seen a healthy looking person that claims to be on that diet?

Vegetarian: Old Indian word for "lousy hunter".

16 posted on 07/30/2003 7:49:44 AM PDT by WestPacSailor (Gun Control: two hand grip, front sight focus, breath, squeeze trigger...repeat as necessary.)
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To: joesnuffy
Two parent familes One parent home with the kids Dad working mom at home Back when America was truly a better place to live

This needs to be repeated.
I've been given the advice by those who are "wiser" than myself that as the kids get older I'll learn to appreciate what a great babysitter the TV is. Like hell I will. TV is really only a legitimate distraction, (and not all that effective), for uhh... "mommy and daddy time".

17 posted on 07/30/2003 7:52:18 AM PDT by BMiles2112
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To: bedolido
I don't see the problem. At least in my sons school most kids are rather lean, no more percentage of "overweight" children than I remember from 30+ years ago.

Considering that people have used the testing standards these groups promote and found well conditioned atheletes overweight I'm beggining to think this is more media hype than a real problem.

They must have figured out a way to throw money at somebody to solve another problem.
18 posted on 07/30/2003 7:53:40 AM PDT by steve50 (the main problem with voting is a politican always wins)
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To: since1868
The problem with writing menus for the school lunch program is you have to find a realistic medium between what you know is good for the kids and what they will eat.

You can serve folks all the healthy food in the world, but if they don't put in in their mouths, it doesn't make a bit of difference. And the food gets tossed in the trash. I know of parents now who send their kids to school daily with bag lunches of chips, Little Debbies and bologna sandwiches....the kid's favorite foods, and what they have been trained to eat at home.

So, healthy eating DOES start at home. So does higher activity levels. Every obese kid that has ever been sent to me is a Tater Tot....too much time in front of the TV or computer and almost zero activity (bike riding, sports, just out in the street playing). Plus lots of junky stuff to eat ad lib. Type II diabetes is rampant in the under 12 set....but often simply increasing their activity level improves their insulin's efficacy.

I agree, the school meals are too high fat etc. But there are guidelines in place now to bring them more in line; to reduce the total fat, and make sure a certain percentage of nutritional needs are met at a single meal. Again, the trick being finding that middle ground between what is good for them and what they will eat.

I have watched some of our juvie patients eat and granted, I am impressed with how some of the kids actually choose veges (like turnip greens) and pieces of fruit.

Like they are something new and exotic~~sigh~~

19 posted on 07/30/2003 8:00:34 AM PDT by najida (What handbasket? And where did you say we were going?)
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To: ctlpdad
My 12 year old niece told me THAT yesterday about school lunches (she's fat)....and then she went on to describe how good those lunches are....most of the children of my relatives are plump or fat....and, yes, it's about PARENTING....I would send this to some of them, but they'd be pissed.
20 posted on 07/30/2003 8:01:11 AM PDT by goodnesswins (Any day good things happen FOR AMERICA is a BAD day for the Democrats!)
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