Kids Need Help Staying Slim
Schools may need more money and regulators
may need more authority to help children from spiraling into obesity,
experts and politicians stated.
Children need help to get away
from television and video games and outside to walk, play and
exercise, they said. And corporations can help with programs aimed
at educating kids about good nutrition and exercise, they added.
"Childhood obesity has reached
epidemic proportions," said Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist,
a Tennessee Republican and doctor who also chairs the Senate Health,
Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.
More than 9 million U.S. children
are obese, meaning their health is at serious risk. Another 15
percent of all children are overweight.
Not only do they risk being fat
all their lives, doctors say, but they have a higher than average
risk of heart disease and diabetes.
"This generation of kids growing
up today could be the first to have a shorter lifespan than their
parents," Iowa Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin told the committee hearing.
"Half-measures won't work. It has
to be a comprehensive national response. It is a clarion call
to Congress for us to act boldly."
Last week, the Institute of Medicine
said it would take a full national effort to battle childhood
obesity. The independent group, which advises the federal government
on health matters, said food and drink labels need be clearer.
It also asked restaurants to come up with more healthy alternatives
for children.
Connecticut Democratic Sen. Chris
Dodd said he hoped the House could be persuaded to pass a bill
introduced in the Senate last year aimed at reducing obesity,
particularly among children and adolescents.
The bill, sponsored by Frist, Dodd
and Democratic Sen. Jeff Bingaman of New Mexico, would authorize
$60 million for a demonstration community obesity program
and give the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention more authority
to gather information on childhood fitness levels.
Congress is scheduled to adjourn
on Friday until after the Nov. 2 elections.
The CDC's Dixie Snider said the
formula for obesity is clear -- eating more calories than are
burned off with exercise. But more research is needed on how to
get people to change their habits in a world where they are surrounded
by rich food and comforts.
"We still have a ways to go to
understand what are the best ways to effect changes in personal
behavior," Snider said.
Lynn Swann, chairman of the President's
Council of Physical Fitness and Sports, said schools need extra
funding to create exercise and sports programs that all children
can take part in. "In many cases, the only people who participate
in sports are the best athletes," he said.
Read
a PDF report on Child Obesity
"Public
Health Crisis, Prevention as a Cure"
Related
articles on Child Obesity or Childhood
Obesity
Related
articles on Overweight Children
Reference
Source 89
October 6, 2004
For
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