Showing posts with label child obesity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label child obesity. Show all posts

Friday, 30 August 2013

Schools tackling obesity and malnutrition


This blog, written by Wikichild co-ordinator Melinda Deleuze, is part of the Wikiprogress Series on Health and Child Well-being. Discussing what schools can do to tackle childhood obesity, the post also leads up to the Wikiprogress September spotlight on Education and skills.

Every time I return to the United States, one of the first things that strikes me is the number of overweight children I see in the airport. During the summer months, the focus has been on feeding hungry American children nutritious food. There are hundreds of programs run by churches, nonprofits and civic groups which receive USDA reimbursements for that purpose. In Arkansas alone, more than $97,000 in grant money was distributed. Now that school is back in session, the aim is not only to give children the nutrition they need, but also to tackle the widespread issue of childhood obesity. 

Child and adolescent obesity is exceedingly prevalent in the US, Canada and Greece. It is also on the rise in most developed countries and in Asia. Over the past 3 decades, childhood obesity rates in America have tripled. Today, nearly one in three children in America are overweight or obese. Approximately 12% of children ages 2 to 5 are obese and 18% of those ages 6 to 19 are considered obese. The figures are higher among African American and Hispanic populations, where nearly 40% of the children are overweight or obese. 

          Percent of overweight children*                            Percent of children who eat breakfast every day*
                11, 13 and 15 years old                                                        11, 13 and 15 years old
Obesity has many negative consequences, and last week the American Medical Association pronounced childhood obesity a disease. Obese children and adolescents are at greater risk for bone and joint problems, sleep apnoea, and social problems. Also, school children suffering from obesity are at higher risk of developing psychological problems. An obese child is at a higher risk of becoming an obese adult. Therefore, iIt is important to intervene earlier in life in order to combat and reverse adult weight issues that could cause severe health complications.

Schools play an essential role in tackling obesity among children and adolescents by establishing a healthier diet, increasing activity and educating about food and nutrition. In America, there are 32 million students who eat school lunches and 12 million who eat a school breakfast every school day. Ensuring that these meals are healthy and nutritious is part of the solution to childhood obesity, as well as improving children’s overall health and wellness. In January 2012, standards for school meals in US public schools were updated to the following criteria:  

• Ensure students are offered both fruits and vegetables every day of the week;
• Increase offerings of whole grain-rich foods;
• Offer only fat-free or low-fat milk;
• Limit calories based on the age of children being served to ensure proper portion size;
• Increase the focus on reducing the amounts of saturated fat, trans fats, added sugars, and sodium.

Schools are required to meet these standards in order to receive federal meal reimbursements. Fewer children ate school lunches after the standards began to take effect, especially those who paid full-price for their lunches; however, breakfast consumption at school increased. More schools provided grab-and-go breakfasts, breakfast in the classroom and second-chance breakfasts, as well as traditional breakfasts served in the cafeteria at no charge. Additionally, in July 2014, schools nationwide will be forced to remove junk food, soda and sugary snacks from their vending machines and menus. Some other recommendations in order to improve diets are encouraging parents to bring non-food treats for birthday celebrations and selling non-food options for fundraisers. 

     Percent of children who eat fruit daily*       Percent of children who exercise at least one hour daily*
                   11, 13 and 15 years old                                                        11, 13 and 15 years old

A school’s curriculum and efforts to increase physical activity can have a major impact on reducing obesity. What children eat at school is only part of the problem, because their amount of physical activity has a serious impact on their weight. Quality exercise can burn up just about anything a child ingests. Unfortunately, only 9 states require recess at the elementary level, while 41 states do not. Physical activity could be added to the classroom, for example by having students act out words, instead of sitting in chairs the entire lesson. Also, schools should not allow physical activity to be withheld (e.g. withholding recess) or used as punishment (e.g. making a student run laps). Another idea is to perform a “walkability assessment” to determine the environmental factors which deter students from walking to school, such as unsafe crossings and broken sidewalks. 
 

Schools can also use the classroom to teach children of all ages about eating nutritious, well-balanced meals. Gardens offer great opportunities to educate younger children about how healthy food is produced, while providing a fun and physical activity. Fruits and vegetables could also be used to teach shapes and colors. Teachers of older students could use fruits and vegetables from the garden when learning about weights and measurements. Also, adolescents should learn about counting calories, burning calories and daily nutritional value charts. Children who have a healthy association with food and who understand the benefits of a balanced diet will be at a lower risk for obesity.

Finally, if schools notified parents about their children’s state of health and informed them of ways they could help, then parents could reinforce good eating habits and encourage activity. Several programs have begun sharing students’ body mass index (BMI) scores, along with fitness test results, with parents. This height-to-weight information allows parents to continue conversations with their children and bring in a pediatrician if necessary. This program was piloted in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and obesity among 5 to 13 year old students decreased 6% in less than a decade. If schools decide to notify parents about their child’s BMI, they should respect the sensitivity and confidentiality of the information in order to avoid bullying and eating disorders.

Changes need to be made, in both the school and home settings, in order to improve the health of children. Early interventions are the best way to tackle obesity issues. There are several resources available to schools and parents to facilitate change and increase healthy habits:


Wikichild co-ordinator  

*These charts and data are from the UNICEF Report Card 11: Child well-being in rich countries

Tuesday, 25 September 2012

Wellbeing Wales: Bridgend Community Weight Management Programme.


Weight loss can be difficult at the best of times. Temptation and easy options lurk round every corner and keeping up an active lifestyle can be difficult when attempting to juggle the many demands of day-to-day life.

In the battle against obesity, Over half of Welsh adults are currently ranked as overweight or obese

Gastric bands, pills and restricted diets may provide a solution to the weight issue but the causes of over eating are often rooted in more than just diet. Many factors contribute to people’s behavioral patterns and eating habits are no different. Social, material, economic and environmental  factors all have a bearing on people’s ability to maintain a healthy weight and lifestyle.

The Garw valley in Bridgend, Wales is one area where service providers have really adopted the whole person approach to weight management. Their Weight Management Programme arose from one local GP’s frustration at the lack of local options to support obese patients and their desire to offer patients access to the established ‘slimming on referral’ schemes offered by the commercial weight management organisations.

From this the Weight Management Programme was born. The programme aimed to work to integrate health and leisure services as a non-clinical intervention for weight management. The programme involved shaping behaviour through group activities that maintained peer support, motivation and other social aspects.  The programme involved referral and support from primary care, the Weight Watchers scheme, the exercise referral scheme and signposting to community activities to aid sustainable health promoting behavior change.

Dafydd Thomas, Executive Director at Lles Cymru Wellbeing Wales was commissioned to pilot a wellbeing assessment process to explore the range of factors affecting the participants, their wellbeing and in turn their ability or motivation to manage their weight. 

The assessment explored the Weight Management Programme participant’s own subjective assessments of their wellbeing, grounded in the specific context of their community and experience using indicators that they themselves developed.

To read the report summery then please click here. We'd love to hear your thoughts on it so why not drop us an e-mail at admin@wellbeingwales.org 

Wellbeing Wales

Monday, 23 July 2012

Olympic super humans and the epidemic of child obesity


From July 26 until August 12, the world’s attention will be turned to London for the 2012 Olympic Games. Images of fit and healthy individuals will be blasted into our homes by way of the world’s media and many of us will spend the duration of the Games in awe of these super human individuals whose physical and mental strength is quite beyond comprehension. Whilst these super humans provide good role models for us adults, they provide even better ones for children. They also have the potential to play a key role in addressing one of the world’s most widespread epidemics - child obesity.

Like the Olympics, childhood obesity is of interest to all countries as in recent years, this global epidemic has escalated with trends for overweight and obesity increasing in both developed and developing countries (Flynn McNeill Maloff et al, 2006) and as Jamie Oliver says in his 2011 TED talk, ‘We have an awful, awful reality right now’.

  • Approximately 42 million children under five were estimated to be overweight or obese in 2010, almost 35 million of whom live in developing countries (NOO, 2012).
  • In Mexico 1 in 3 children is overweight (Malkin E, 2011) and in Brazil the rate of overweight and obese children increased from 4% in the 1980s to 14% in the 1990s.
  • In the United States, child and adolescent obesity levels nearly tripled between the early 1980’s and the 2000’s and in Canada, levels in boys alone increased from 11-30% from the 1980‘s to the 90’s (Flynn McNeill Maloff et al, 2006).

For children obesity can have emotional and psychological impacts and lead to life threatening conditions including diabetes, heart disease and high blood pressure among others. A 2008 study found that obese children had prematurely aged neck arteries which were more typical of a 45 year old as opposed to someone their own age (CTV, 2008). Caused by poor diet and physical inactivity, childhood obesity is fuelled by environmental and in some cases genetic factors with obesity in parents posing the greatest risk factor to children (Cole, 2006).

These figures are concerning, not only for the long term impacts that the persistence of this epidemic will have on the health of the world’s population and ultimately their productivity, but also because of the speed with which it is growing. The OECD’s Better Life Index reports that in 21 of the 34 OECD countries, more than 50% of the adult population is overweight or obese and that over the past 20 years rates of obesity have more than doubled in these countries (OECD, 2012).

Many countries have taken action. Starting in 2006, the UK which has one of the highest rates among European countries, introduced new nutritional guidelines to drive improvements in child health and reduce child obesity. New legislation was drawn up on the amount of junk food allowed to be sold in school canteens and there has been a rise in the popularity of traditional school dinners, which now meeting nutritional standards ensure children receive 1 balanced meal per day (Paton, 2010). Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver has been a frontline campaigner for this change as he discusses in the aforementioned TED Talk.

The implications of this growing epidemic are alarming. In the context of the upcoming Olympic Games, governments’ worldwide should take the opportunity to acknowledge the gravity of child obesity which affects an estimated 10% of children globally (Bessesen, 2008). They should leverage off the Olympic super human role models and reignite efforts to address childhood obesity to give children a fair chance in life, right from the beginning.

Bessesen Dh 2008, Update on obesity, J.Clin. Endocrinol. Metab, 93 (6):2027-34

Cole T 2006, Early Causes of Childhood Obesity and Implications for Prevention, http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/14548/1/14548.pdf, [Accessed 10.07.2012]

CTV, 2008, Obese kids have arteries of 45-year-olds: study, http://www.ctvnews.ca/obese-kids-have-arteries-of-45-year-olds-study-1.341919, 11 November 2008, [Accessed 10.07.2012]

Flynn MA, McNeil DR, Maloff B, et al 2006, Reducing obesity and related chronic disease risk in children and youth: a synthesis of evidence with 'best practice' recommendations, Obes Rev 7 (Suppl 1): 7–66, (February 2006), [Accessed 10.07.2012]

Malkin E 2011, Mexico Puts Its Children on a Diet, http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/14/world/americas/14mexico.html, NY Times 13 March 2011, [Accessed 10.07.2012]

National Obesity Observatory 2012, International Prevalence, http://www.noo.org.uk/NOO_about_obesity/child_obesity/international, [Accessed 10.07.2012]

OECD, 2012, Better Life Index, Health, http://www.oecdbetterlifeindex.org/topics/health/

Paton G, Jamie Oliver Inspires School Dinner Revival, The Telegraph, 08, 07, 2010, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/educationnews/7879198/Jamie-Oliver-inspires-school-meal-revival.html