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Satcher:
Obesity Reaching Crisis Levels
Excerpt
By
Melinda T. Willis ABCNEWS.com
A new report by the surgeon general
calls on schools and communities to help prevent the growing spread
of obesity.
Citing an epidemic of obesity, Surgeon General Dr. David Satcher
today called on communities and schools to help children and adults
lose weight and stay healthy.
Satcher identified schools as central to efforts to prevent and
decrease excess weight problems, and recommended they improve
physical education programs and provide healthy food alternatives.
Communities also must offer safe places to exercise, he urged.
"Many people believe that dealing with overweight and obesity
is a personal responsibility," Satcher states in the forward to
the report. "To some degree they are right, but it is also a community
responsibility."
Obesity Growing Across Age Groups
An estimated 300,000 deaths may be attributed to obesity in
the United States each year, and more than 60 percent of adults
in 1999 could be classified as overweight or obese, according
to the new report from the surgeon general.
But the problem is not just a concern for adults. The prevalence
of obesity for adolescents has nearly tripled in the past two
decades, making early intervention all the more critical.
According to the report, in 1999, 13 percent of children between
the ages of 6 and 11 and 14 percent of those aged 12 to 19 were
overweight.
"Whereas one time obesity was a condition that usually afflicted
more middle-aged women, now it has swept across the entire age
span, even down to several years old," says Dr. Steven Heymsfield,
deputy director of the New York Obesity Research Center at St.
Luke's Roosevelt Hospital in New York.
And the younger a person begins to carry excess weight, the
greater the potential impact on their future quality of life.
Weight gain and obesity are major contributors to poor health,
increasing the risk of a number of medical conditions including
heart disease, diabetes, arthritis, asthma, and even certain cancers.
According to the report, obese individuals have a 50 to 100
percent greater risk of premature death from all causes compared
to individuals without excess weight.
"When you take a 5-year-old who is obese and you think forward
60, 70, 80 years, that person's life is shortened by their excess
weight," says Heymsfield.
Schools Called to Act
Among the surgeon general's "calls to action" is that physical
education be provided for all children in grades K through 12,
an idea supported by many educators who feel that PE should be
mandatory.
"I definitely think that PE and recess should be required in
schools, not only to fight obesity, but because our minds and
bodies work together," says Nancy Martin-Finks, a guidance counselor
at South River Elementary School in Grottoes, Va. "Schools should
be required to supply physical education along with academics."
Some educators feel that the scope of physical education should
go above and beyond exercise. "PE should be more than running
around a track," says Rani G. Hawes, assistant principal at George
C. Marshall High School in Falls Church, Va. "It should include
how to live healthy, how to develop and exercise program and eating
nutritious food."
The surgeon general's report also emphasizes the importance
of healthy food and beverage options on school campuses and at
school events. And experts agree that the availability of vending
machines in many schools plays an important role in feeding the
obesity epidemic.
"The school has become an adverse environment for children to
go to," says Dr. Francis Kaufman, head of the division of endocrinology
at Children's Hospital in Los Angeles. "Not only are we serving
fast food [in schools], we're encouraging children to drink soda.
The soft drink industry is bidding for our children and we're
selling them."
Other recommendations for action include reducing the amount
of time spent in sedentary behaviors like watching television,
and building physical activity into regular routines. Children
should get at least 60 minutes of moderate activity on most days
of the week and adults should get at least 30.
Making children's health a priority shouldn't be difficult,
say experts.
"This isn't going to cost zillions of dollars," says Kaufman.
"We're not looking to reinvent something. We're looking to bring
back what most of us had when we were growing up."
ABCNEWS' Monika Konrad contributed to this report.
Reference
Source 104
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