Obesity Is a Big Problem in Tennessee
Obesity is a big problem in Tennessee,
more than in many other states. But the solution may be in small
steps.
Walk more, eat less and include
dairy products to burn fat is the message of a largely grass-roots,
consumer-driven, voluntary health project called Tennessee on
the Move.
"Nationwide, about a quarter of
men and a third of women are obese, and about two-thirds of adults
are overweight," said University of Tennessee nutrition professor
Michael Zemel, who will direct the project.
"Where does Tennessee fall on that
list? We are a little bit higher on each of those numbers," he
said.
Tennessee ranks in the Top 10 nationally
in obesity and overweight residents, according to the American
Obesity Association.
"I have to tell you, this is a
matter of life and death," U.S. Rep. Zach Wamp, R-Tenn., said
Tuesday in announcing a $500,000 grant from the federal Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention to underwrite Tennessee on
the Move.
A national model formed in Colorado,
the program has become America on the Move and adopted by the
Bush administration.
Zemel said the CDC funding will
be used to hire three coordinators one for each Grand Division
who will promote Tennessee on the Move in schools, health
departments, boys and girls clubs and corporate wellness programs.
Federal Express, for instance, already has adopted it.
The money also will buy educational
materials, support a Web site that residents can personalize to
reach their own specific health goals and supply pedometers for
walkers who can't afford them.
"We have an enormous problem and
our inclination when faced with an enormous problem is to seek
enormous solutions, to seek the big ideas," Zemel said. "What
we propose instead is small steps, the small idea."
Many people can't spend hours at
a gym or radically change their diet to health food, but Zemel
sees huge gains in smaller doses.
His recommendations:
_ Move more. Walk 2,000 steps,
or about a mile, each day.
_ Eat less. Reduce consumption
by 100 calories, about a pat of butter.
_ Include lowfat dairy products
that UT research has found can help burn fat.
This formula will prevent the weight
gain of 1 to 3 pounds that most Americans experience each year,
according to the program.
"When you are in a hole the first
thing you have to do is stop digging," Wamp said. "We want obesity
to stop in this country and not get worse so we can reverse this
trend."
Being overweight increases risks
for hypertension, coronary heart disease, diabetes and several
cancers, Zemel said. Obesity ranks second only to smoking as the
nation's greatest preventable health threat.
At the current rate, he said, "In
less than two years, obesity will be the No. 1 killer."
___
Tennessee on the Move: http://www.americaonthemove.org/tn
Reference
Source 102
August 12, 2004
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