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Childhood Obesity Down


Posted: Feb 28, 2014

Remember when the Republican talking point was Michelle Obama was interfering too much in children's rights to be fat? Check out good reason #6 below. **** A major new paper appearing in today's edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association finds that childhood obesity -- age 2 to 5 -- has fallen from 13.9 percent in 2003-04 to 8.4 percent in 2011-12. This age was the only group to see a significant decline . . . 1.Nutrition assistance such as food stamps and WIC (women, infants and children) may have led to decreases in childhood obesity among low-income Americans as federal standards have changed to promote healthier eating. For example, WIC has revised its funding formula to boost the amount of fruits and vegetables and peanut butter a mother and her child eat. At the time time, WIC has limited the amount of (non-breast) milk that a child drinks, to limit fat intake. 2.New federal nutritional guidelines have trickled down to state and local programs, such as encouraging increased consumption of water and 100 percent fruit juice, limiting serving sizes, encouraging a single adult not to feed more than one infant at a time, and limiting time in front of the television. 3.As the value of breastfeeding has been increasingly understood, there’s been a substantial increase in babies drinking breastmilk. One study showed that 70.3 percent of children breastfed in 2000, rising to 74.6 percent in 2008. 4.Pregnant women have increasingly understood the risks of smoking during pregnancy, with a study showing the percentage of women doing so declining from 13.3 percent in 2000 to 12.3 percent in 2010. 5.Food companies, under pressure, have limited television advertisements targeting children. Between 2003 and 2007, the daily exposure of a child, age to 2 to 5, to food ads fell by 13.7 percent. 6.A number of national initiatives have promoted healthy eating among children, such as first lady Michelle Obama’s “Let’s Move” initiative and reports from a wide range of groups such as the American Public Health Association and American Academy of Pediatrics ;

If kids would get off their butts and go outside and play - Sick of Michelle with her fat butt

[ In Reply To ..]
Instead of sitting in front of the TV playing video games, they wouldn't be fat in the first place. They don't want to do anything physical such as riding bikes, roller skating, etc. It is all about using their thumbs on video games for hours on end.

LOL - nm

[ In Reply To ..]
nm

Michelle does not have - a fat butt

[ In Reply To ..]
She is a beautiful and fit woman. I have heard Mr. Limbaugh say this many times, he who indeed does have a fat butt (and everything else).

I do agree kids need to go outside and play more, which is exactly what FLOTUS is trying to get them to do, so you obviously agree with her.

No, I don't agree with her - Sick of Michelle

[ In Reply To ..]
Just another instance of the government butting into everybody's business. They think they are smarter than anybody else and know how to run everybody else's lives. Typical liberal elitist attitude. In my opinion, she DOES have a fat butt.

This cracks me up. Inactivity is only PART of the problem. - sm

[ In Reply To ..]
First, one needs to realize that not all children have access to a yard to play in or a safe street to rollerskate on. Second, sedentary activities to keep childern entertained have been around for years, long before the childhood obesity epidemic (I always wonder why the video game blamers never mention Monopoly or other board games, extensive homework or studying, arts and crafts, Barbie, etc., for kids being overweight), so where were the fat kids before?

The problem is what we've been feeding our kids... junk high in fat and loaded with HFCS. This garbage makes them fat AND lethargic. Easy access to (including in a "normal" school lunch of fries, nuggets, and chocolate milk) and promotion of this poison directed specifically at children is doing more harm than any video game could. Not to mention the fact that oftentimes healthy foods are inaccessible in poor communities or are too expensive for folks to buy. Why pay $x/pound for apples when you can get a hamburger from the dollar menu?

BTW, I don't think you're gonna get very far on this board by calling the first lady fat. You do realize you're on an MT board (where most of us sit upwards of 8 hours a day on our butts and would kill to be as fit as the first lady)? If she's fat, I'm Jabba the Hutt.

Board games, homework, arts and crafts, Barbie, etc.? - Truthhurts

[ In Reply To ..]
Those games, "extensive" homework, and the others you mentioned are not an all day/night activity. Video games and TV programs every free minute these kids have is part of the problem.

Kids used to roller skate on pavements, not in the street. As for access to a yard, there are basketball courts, YMCAs, other clubs kids could go to to have fun. Kids used to go to those places if they didn't have a yard.

So your arguments there don't hold water.

Parents buying or allowing their kids to buy fast food every day is the problem with obese kids. I agree there, but when combined with plenty of exercise...(even WALKING which most kids don't do anymore either), that problem could also be avoided. The fast food places are adding healthier alternatives all the time but the kids aren't buying into those items.

Not to show my age, but in my teenage years, we had lots of hangouts with pizza, hamburgers, hot dogs, milk shakes, sodas, but the main difference was we WALKED everywhere AND part of our education was taking HEALTH and PHYSICAL ED. Do they even do that anymore? Basketball, running around the football field, hockey, climbing a rope, push-ups, sit-ups, and other exercises were all part of PE and we were graded on it. If you flunked PE, you had to retake it every year until you passed.

That's the difference....and I remember being warned about working at a desk all day long because you would get a fat butt because of it. LOL
I've had discussions with you about this topic before - sm
[ In Reply To ..]
I'm not saying inactivity is not a problem; however, it's not the main problem. Poor nutrition is. The pre-packaged foods and fast foods our kids are living on are bad for them. As a result, we have a bunch of obese yet malnourished kids. The diets that they eat leave them sluggish with short spikes in energy (usually from a sugar rush) followed by crashing. And this is especially sad since children will naturally have good energy levels and will want to be active when fed properly.

The main difference from when some folks were growing up (depending on how old you are) is that since the 70s, our foods are laced with corn, mostly in the form of HFCS. This crap is added to almost ALL processed/packaged foods and, while it might taste good, it's packed with extra empty calories (and it's cheap)... not to mention all the added fat. Kids who don't know better go to grab juice (which you'd think is healthy because it's supposed to come from fruit), and they're drinking pure sugar. Even the "healthy" alternatives offered at fast food places aren't really all that healthy (and usually are more expensive and don't come with a toy).

Yes, times have changed, and the video games available now might be more tempting to play for hours, but some kids don't have the drive to be active because they don't have the energy to do so.

While we're on the times are a changing subject, I also think that some kids aren't allowed to run around outdoors like we used to. I had the old "be home before dark" rule in my house, and we would run around all over the place. The world is a little scarier now for some folks, so they might not let their kids play unsupervised out of fear of speeding cars and weirdos even if the kids are old enough to do so.

That's very true. Most kids do lose weight when their - lunch is thrown in the trash cause it sucks.`

[ In Reply To ..]
nm

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