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Child
Obesity Prevention
Childhood obesity prevention is an issue
every parent needs to address, early in life!
According to a recent news report, 34% of
people in the U.S. are overweight, with an additional 33% considered
obese! This means that just a third of us are of 'normal' weight.
These statistics include people of all ages, including kids. No
wonder everyone seems to be on a perpetual diet, with dozens of best
selling books on weight loss programs and entire corporations
dedicated to weight loss products and programs. It's clear that
parents, for the sake of their kid's health, need to formulate a
child obesity prevention program, beginning in grade school.
Just a few decades ago, you hardly ever saw a
child who looked overweight. In fact, kids were most often
considered scrawny, until they were well into their teens and
started filling out and gaining weight. Today, children who are
scrawny are few and far between. Now, kids still in grade school are
being diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. Type 2 diabetes used to be a
condition, which didn't develop until at least middle age. Being
overweight is a risk factor for a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes,
along with a host of other health conditions, including heart
disease.
It's not difficult to figure out why a child
obesity prevention program is necessary. What has caused this
epidemic of overweight and obese kids? A brief look back in recent
history and American eating patterns provides some clear answers.
During the Great Depression, people had a hard
time putting sufficient food on the table. As a result, there were
very few overweight people. Kids were thin, as a rule and remained
so into their adult years. The next generation of kids, while
growing taller and generally being better nourished, still did not
develop weight problems at an early age. What we now call 'whole'
foods, that is, unprocessed foods which did not contain excessive
amounts of salt and sugar, hormones, antibiotics and food additives,
were the healthy foods served every day.
The Great Depression can’t take all of the
blame. Our food supply during those times was more nutritious than
the food of today. Due to poor farming practices and where the
dollar is more important, a person who eats a poor nutritional
quality food will starve his body’s nutrition that is passed on the
cells. The cells, knowing they are underfed start a chain reaction
that works back up to the appetite. The body now thinks it needs
more food. The nutrition is passed to the cells but the
carbohydrates are stored in the form of fat.
So it is a cycle of eat more, gain more. To
stop this cycle, a good food supplement is what is needed. The food
supplement I take comes in 6 different flavors. This is really good
for children. The supplement tastes like a milk shake and provides
all of the essential nutrition, minerals, vitamins fiber and much
more.
This will take the couch potato off the
couch and have him up and busy with the new found energy from the
new nourishment his body is receiving. The energy will come from the
loss of weight and from the food supplement.
The term 'couch potato' had not been coined
the time of the Great Depression and people would have thought you
were crazy had you mentioned the need for child obesity prevention.
These problems simply did not exist. Kids got daily exercise both in
school through P.E. Classes and schoolyard recess, and begged
parents to go ride their bikes or go to the playground. Fast food,
processed foods and junk food did not constitute the majority of
kid's diets, as is the case today. Soda, candy and chips were
considered occasional treats.
Perhaps the most effective child obesity
prevention program is to make a return to the general eating and
exercise habits of the post World War II era. Sure, you'll have no
trouble prying the kids away from several hours of web surfing and
television watching when they have the newfound energy and get rid
of the excess fat. They will insist that they get out to ride bikes,
play a game of basketball, soccer, volleyball or baseball for just
an hour each day – they will become normal children again.
No kid wants to be overweight or obese. While
you may initially have to force them to comply with your child
obesity prevention program, once they break their old habits,
they'll feel and see the positive effects. They may even come to
enjoy their new habits. One thing is for certain. For the sake of
our kid's health, both now and through adulthood, we must address
this epidemic of overweight and obese kids now.
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