Congress to Battle Obesity in Kids

-Cp

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Sep 23, 2004
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Want to stop kids from being fat? Get their asses outside, away from the video games, internet and movies - and stop feeding them fast food for the Love of God!


http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,134680,00.html



Last week, under a mandate from Congress, the Institute of Medicine (search) initiated a report to battle childhood obesity in America.

The report was sweeping in scope, calling on government at all levels to muster resources, and to take decisive action. It called for massive federal intervention in public education, federal nutrition requirements in school lunches, heavy regulation of soda and snack machines, and for Federal Trade Commission authority over the marketing of food to children.

The report also called on local governments to change zoning laws to favor pedestrians and bicyclists over automobiles.

"We're talking about something that's nothing less than a revolution," Dr. Thomas Robinson, one of the authors, told the Boston Globe. "It has to involve so many elements in our society. ... It's really going to require a major sea change in how we look at this problem."

That’s the kind of language government usually invokes in times of war, not in response to a hard-to-define condition with ambiguous consequences brought on by voluntary behavior. Indeed, Surgeon General Richard Carmona recently said that our expanding waistlines were “every bit as threatening as the terrorist threat.”

Our political leaders are asking that we enlist every sector of society to wage what is essentially a war on baby fat.

But even the commission’s “revolution” wasn’t enough for some nutrition activists. "As it stands, the recommendations are weak,” longtime nutrition warrior Marion Nestle told the Chicago Tribune. “There is nothing here with any teeth in it."

This childhood obesity scare, however, is just part of an alleged obesity epidemic among the adult population. But, just how severe is America’s obesity problem? Do we really have a developing public health disaster on our hands?

The data suggest not.

According to Rockefeller University (search) professor Jeffrey Friedman, as quoted in The New York Times, Americans have been getting modestly chubbier since the early 1980s. Friedman also told the Times that most of us are carrying an extra 4-6 pounds — not much to worry about — while the very obese among us have gotten very much more obese. The result is a significant increase in the population’s average weight, but an increase that’s mostly caused by those very heavy people, not by the vast majority of the population, as media reports and nutrition activists would have you believe.

Indeed, if the whole of America has, over the past two decades, been getting as fat as alarmist headlines have suggested, we should be starting to see the early signals of this coming public health crisis. That’s just not the case.

According to the National Center for Health Statistics, Americans are living longer than ever before. A child born today into almost any demographic group can expect to live more years than at any other time in American history.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that, since 1985, the number of states reporting obesity rates of 10 percent or more stood at eight; by 2001, it was all 50. Yet average life expectancy over that period increased by about 2.5 years. Obesity rates in African-American women increased 50 percent more than in white women between 1988 and 2001, yet African-American women saw an increase in life expectancy of 2.3 years, compared to just 1.3 years in white women.

According to the American Heart Association, coronary heart disease (search) is down 25 percent since 1990. Total cardiovascular disease is down 16.5 percent. Stroke is down over 10 percent. Deaths from cancer have fallen by about 1.1 percent per year every year since 1993, including in nine of the ten types of cancer most associated with obesity.

Of course, these drops in disease rates can be explained by medical advances, increased public awareness and early diagnosis, and no one is suggesting that obesity is healthy or that being overweight does not cause health risks. However, if the anti-fat activists are correct, we should be seeing at least the front end of this looming health catastrophe. It simply hasn’t happened.

In fact, the only disease commonly associated with obesity that has seen a rise in the last 20 years is diabetes. But, even the CDC acknowledges on its own Web site that many factors other than obesity have contributed to the diabetes spike, among those factors an aging population, increased awareness of the disease and changes in the way diabetes is defined, diagnosed and reported.

Which brings us to childhood obesity and diabetes. An increase in Type II diabetes cases among children is the principal battle cry among those advocating heavy government intervention. The CDC reports that about 7.2 children per 100,000 are now diagnosed with the disease. However, the number of children with eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia is estimated by the National Mental Health Association to be around 2,500 per 100,000. When kids are 347 times more likely to have an illness associated with poor body image than they are an illness associated with obesity, asking our public schools to have growing kids step on the scale — as the Institute of Medicine report recommends — doesn’t seem like such a great idea.

Even if the tenuous connections between obesity and illness were as firm as the anti-fat warriors would have us believe, there’s still reason for caution when calling for government intervention. Any far-reaching government program is likely to be costly, and just as likely to restrict personal choice and undermine personal responsibility. Most government programs also come with the hidden costs of unintended consequences, such as incubating eating disorders among young girls by asking them to weigh themselves in front of their peers. There’s also no guarantee that any of these programs will be effective.

The best thing Congress can do in the fight against obesity is understand that there are some spheres of life that simply aren’t within the purview of government. How and when and how much we eat — and how we raise our kids with respect to diet, food and exercise — ought to be one of those spheres.
 
I'm convinced nothing will change - a HUGE help would be for Government to stop preaching its 'high in carbs' diets, and feel otherwise-healthy fat people a heap load of Atkins.
 
Health professionals have described it as a national epidemic. About nine million kids are affected. That amounts to 15 percent of American children, aged 6 to 11 years, who are considerably overweight. This number has actually tripled in the past 30 years. And the rates for obesity are actually greater for minority children. Over 25 percent of Black and Hispanic kids are overweight.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that, since 1985, the number of states reporting obesity rates of 10 percent or more stood at eight; by 2001, it was all 50. Yet average life expectancy over that period increased by about 2.5 years. Obesity rates in African-American women increased 50 percent more than in white women between 1988 and 2001, yet African-American women saw an increase in life expectancy of 2.3 years, compared to just 1.3 years in white women.

FAT = LAZY and IGNORANT
 
Maybe some federally mandated parenting classes might be in order. If you don't pass, you have to have an abortion. I'm against federal funding of abortion but in this case I'd support it.

If this doesn't smack of Big Brother, I don't know what does.
 
I am actually working on a mailing for a conference we are having on this issue. Which is about eating, exercise & education solutions for improving health and school performance. Data included on the mailers are ............

According to the American Academy Of Pediatrics 2003 Policy statement, one in every three kid's ages 6-11 is overweight, wheras 15.3% of 6 to 11year olds and 15.5% of 12 to 19 year olds are obese.


National survey data show that

20% of U.S. children 8-16 years old reported two or fewer sessions of vigorous physical activity per week.

More than 25% of the above group watched at least 4 hours of TV per day.

One-third of the daily energy intake for today's U.S. children comes from low nutrient snack foods.

Source~ University of Cincinnati Area Health Education Center~
 
Granny used to fatten Uncle Ferd up so's he wouldn't have to go to war...
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Too Fat to Fight: Military Threatened by Childhood Obesity
15 Oct 2017 | Even the kids in America's fittest state are too fat to fight their nation's wars, a pro-military nonprofit argues in a new study.
The military has long bemoaned America's tubby youth, and the Council for a Strong America says Colorado is part of the problem, with more than 27 percent of the state's children categorized as overweight. "Low levels of physical activity and the obesity epidemic are contributing to an unprecedented readiness problem for our armed forces," the nonprofit said. Those extra candy bars compound a complex problem for military recruiting. Between other health issues, criminal records and other troubles from facial tattoos to drug habits, a full 70 percent of Colorado teens are ineligible for military service. Retired Command Sgt. Maj. Terrance McWilliams said extra pounds are of special concern because weight can cost lives on the battlefield. "It gets extremely dangerous when you can't keep up with the rest of the pack," said McWilliams, the former top enlisted soldier at Fort Carson. "You are putting your fellow comrades at greater risk." Strong America's lament might sound familiar. The nonprofit has been citing the issue for years as a danger to America's national security.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says about 17 percent of America's kids are overweight. But the military has a tougher standard. A 6-foot teenage recruit is expected to weigh less than 184 pounds by military standards, when most medical charts would let him have 12 more pounds of cheeseburgers. M. Michael Cooke, Strong America's state director, said the nonprofit sees the goal of slimmer kids as more than a military imperative. "It does render those kids unfit to fight but there are many other reasons to combat childhood obesity," she said. Cooke said fat children face health challenges for a lifetime, costing society. But as the Army aims to bring in 80,000 recruits in the next year, having too many obese teens is troubling for the military. In a news release, Army Recruiting Command's Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Snow said it met 2017 targets by bringing in 69,000 recruits, but hitting the goal came at a cost. "The command achieved its mission by the use of enlistment bonuses for as much as $40,000, with an average bonus of $12,800 for 33,000 recipients to attract the best-quality candidates for service," the command said.

troopsexercise101517-ts600.jpg

Troops exercise to keep fit because "weight can cost lives on the battlefield," according to retired Command Sgt. Maj. Terrance McWilliams.​

To help the military get more fit recruits, Strong America wants state-mandated physical education classes in public schools, more bicycle lanes and boosts to programs that provide healthy food to the poor. Cooke said while Colorado is known for having the leanest adult population in America, that hasn't translated to thinner kids. "We are one of three states in the nation that doesn't mandate physical education," she said. Strong America is broken into several wings, aimed at fighting crime, boosting the military and keeping children in school. The charity, backed by nonprofit giants including the Gates Foundation, plans on taking the obesity issue to the Colorado General Assembly next year. Cooke said she hopes to push lawmakers into policies that lead to healthier kids. Most of what the group wants, she said, can be accomplished for little tax money. "It remains an important message and we haven't solved the problem," Cooke said. Retired Air Force Gen. Gene Renuart, who headed U.S. Northern Command in Colorado Springs, said the nonprofit is on the right track. He said families have a big role to play, too.


Renuart said parents need to turn off the television and send kids outside more. They also need to keep an eye on what their kids eat, he said. "It requires parents be participants and leaders in their children's activity and eating lifestyles," Renuart said. Another option remains for the military: Allowing more fat recruits into the ranks. McWilliams said that would be a dangerous move. "When you have people who aren't physically fit, it degrades the accomplishment of the mission." The Army tried easing standards at the height of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, including allowing heavier troops. McWilliams said that caused a nightmare for commanders preparing their units for combat overseas. "When you do introduce that rigorous physical activity to some of them, that's when you discover the serious health issues that went undiagnosed," he said. The whole problem of military readiness, though, shares a common thread Cooke asserts. "You need to make an investment in children in their younger years."

Too Fat to Fight: Military Threatened by Childhood Obesity | Military.com
 
I am actually working on a mailing for a conference we are having on this issue. Which is about eating, exercise & education solutions for improving health and school performance. Data included on the mailers are ............

According to the American Academy Of Pediatrics 2003 Policy statement, one in every three kid's ages 6-11 is overweight, wheras 15.3% of 6 to 11year olds and 15.5% of 12 to 19 year olds are obese.


National survey data show that

20% of U.S. children 8-16 years old reported two or fewer sessions of vigorous physical activity per week.

More than 25% of the above group watched at least 4 hours of TV per day.

One-third of the daily energy intake for today's U.S. children comes from low nutrient snack foods.

Source~ University of Cincinnati Area Health Education Center~
Here's a suggestion: drop the touchy-feely bullshit crap classes like having two mommies, or what-the-fuck-ever. Reinstate physical fitness classes, screw those who feel intimidated by showering and force those so equipped to shower in the appropriate location. Reinstate classes like shop, home-ec, etc...you know, those classes that included some physical exertion to pass. Reinstate recess, and just let the kids play, fer crissakes! If a bully requires correction, let the kids correct him/her.
 
I go along with all the above...

... except the last part...

... if the other kids could stop the bullies...

... then bullying wouldn't be a problem.

The problem with bullies is that...

... they either tend to run in packs...

... or they'll attack ya after school...

... off school grounds...

... or both.
 
Want to stop kids from being fat? Get their asses outside, away from the video games, internet and movies - and stop feeding them fast food for the Love of God!


Fat Scare Leads to Government Girth



Last week, under a mandate from Congress, the Institute of Medicine (search) initiated a report to battle childhood obesity in America.

The report was sweeping in scope, calling on government at all levels to muster resources, and to take decisive action. It called for massive federal intervention in public education, federal nutrition requirements in school lunches, heavy regulation of soda and snack machines, and for Federal Trade Commission authority over the marketing of food to children.
Federal intervention has misinformed the public. Massive intervention will simply make things worse
 

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