Childhood Obesity Prevention Should Begin At Home!
Tags: childhood obesity, parenting by example, nutrition, healthy habits

A few of you know that I've started training to become a children's fitness specialist and nutritionist. There's definitely a need for it - just look around. As a teacher I see an appalling number of kids whose weight issues begin at a very early age. I also see what they're putting into their bodies, how weight impacts their performance in school (and I'm not just talking about sports and physical education classes), and sad as this sounds, it also effects interaction with their peers. To their credit, some parents are aware of these issues and are trying their best to address the problems - some, but not ALL. If more parents stepped up, took a look at their own eating and health habits, their kids would be better off. Here's my advice to them, to all of us really.
 As parents, we spend a lot of time talking to our kids about the dangers of drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, and Internet safety, but obesity rarely comes up. Yet it's clearly one of the biggest concerns in the United States today and poses dangerous consequences to our children's physical and emotional health. Let's reverse this epidemic by creating a healthy home environment and regularly talking with our kids -- starting as young as two years of age -- about the importance of eating right and engaging in regular physical activity. 

Health Strategies for Parents:



Set a shining example. Kids, especially the youngest ones, mimic their parents. Be a healthy role model at home and on the road.


Put the entire house on a "health program." Never single out one child struggling with a weight issue. Even super thin siblings benefit from healthy eating and regular exercise.


Make healthy eating fun. Involve your kids in meal planning, shopping, and cooking. When kids help pick out and prepare veggies for the stir-fry, or season turkey meat for tacos, they'll be more likely to branch out from mainstays like chicken nuggets. You can also try themed dinners once a week. For example, for Japanese night, make chicken teriyaki, put pillows on the floor, take your shoes off, and eat at the coffee table.


Encourage kid-friendly exercise options. If your child is too self-conscious to participate in team sports or regular after-school activities, you can suggest jumping rope, bike riding, or stair climbing. When it comes to fun family exercise, enjoy weekend bike rides, long walks, adventurous hikes, playing ball, tennis, tossing a Frisbee...anything goes. You could also consider investing in a backyard trampoline, exercise videos, and/or video games that make the player get up and move, such as Dance-Dance Revolution (between $50 and $70) or the Wii game console ($250 with interactive baseball, bowling, boxing, golf, and tennis games included).


Practice a 90/10 food strategy. My rule is 90% healthy food, 10% fun food. Certainly we should limit the not-so-healthy stuff -- but not eliminate it. Diets that are too restrictive backfire with a vengeance. Help your child preplan for occasional indulgences and ensure they fit in with friends and schoolmates (for example, pizza at parties, cake at birthdays, and ice cream with friends).


Seek outside help. If you're having a tough time getting your kids on board, don't hesitate to seek the help of an outside professional. As parents, we all know that some kids are much more likely to follow guidelines and show interest when the information is coming from someone else. To find a qualified pediatric/adolescent registered dietitian in your local area, ask your pediatrician for a recommendation or visit the American Dietetic Association's website at http://www.eatright.org/ and plug in your zip code. Scroll through the list of names and select those who have experience working with kids. You can also investigate personal trainers who work with kids, one-on-one coaches, gym teachers looking for extra after-school hours... if cost is an issue, team up with a few neighborhood kids in the same boat to share the expense.

on 7/17/2008

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runningbear I don't think so. Once my teenagers started driving and working, I felt like I lost total control and much of my influence over what they consume. Hopefully they at least KNOW by that time what's healthy, even if they don't always make the right choices. My son actually has better eating habits than my oldest daughter.
runningbear on 7/22/2008 in response to PureCanadian

PureCanadian Excellent blog - I agree with all your comments. I'm struggling with the all too common battle between the monthly "pizza lunches" at school and healthy eating at home. He loves to cook healthy which is great, but to get him to eat it........that's another story! I miss the days when he would eat every vegetable and fish put in front of him. Does it get easier? Am I being too strict?
PureCanadian on 7/22/2008

davegleason Thanks for posting! I agree. Childhood obesity is on the rise and a big part of that is because adult obesity rates are too!
davegleason on 7/21/2008

OzzieOcean One of the main reasons Bayleigh goes the the school he is at , is because they do not allow junk in the lunchboxes... no chips, no chocolate, and they ask that juices be 100% sugar free juice. Bayleigh enjoys having carrots and celery for lunch... and he gets to choose what fruit(s) he wants. We let him have some choices and he has fun getting lunch together with me. It takes no extra time to prepare, and it give him and me a few fun minutes together in the mornings.
Again I state the sad part, we are the minority. I see how some friends get their kids ready for school... 2 juice boxes, a bag of chips, maybe a granola bar and a prebought sandwich with no nutritional value whatsoever... BUT HEY, its easier right?!!???!
Eventually more people will open their eyes, unfortunately we need to hear more bad news before major changes are made.
OzzieOcean on 7/19/2008 in response to runningbear

runningbear Thanks oz. I can't believe that parents are blind to the fact that their kids are overweight, and they're doing them a terrible disservice by failing to address the problem. Of course I don't mean they should nag or put them down in any way; I've seen that too and that only exascerbates the problem. But if they'd start by packing healthier lunches (I'm serious. You should see what some kids bring to school in their lunchboxes. Either the parents are reaching for what's convenient or the kids are packing the lunchbox without supervision, but sometimes there's not one healthy item in there; it's all prepackaged junk!) And they need to limit computer and game system time and encourage physical activity. Mostly, though, they need to set a healthy example. Overweight kids have trouble relating to their peers, withdraw in school which affects their grades, and tend to miss more school for health reasons than their more active peers. It's time for people to clue in and address the problem!
runningbear on 7/19/2008 in response to OzzieOcean

OzzieOcean Great blog. The sad part is, there are so many parents who just don't know the difference, and since they have been doing it fo so long, why change. It bothers me when I see young kids, sometimes as young as 6, who are already obese, and will no doubt begin suffering from numerous health issues by the age of 12, its just not right, and unnecessary.
I truly wish there were more people like you who sees the potential these kids have and want to make a difference.
I really enjoyed reading your blog!
OzzieOcean on 7/19/2008

runningbear I read a study in yesterday's paper, that the disparity between the physical activity level of kids at age 9 compared to that of the average 15 year is old is astounding. Ninety percent of 9 year old sengage in at least a couple of hours of physical activity per day (on the playground, in organized sports, etc.); by age 15 that number drops to an appalling 3 percent! Of course internet use, dvds, and video game systems play a huge role in fostering couch potatoes. But if we don't do something to turn this trend around, we're going to have a population at tremendous risk for a variety of health problems (obesity, heart disease, type one diabetes and high blood pressure to name but a few)that develop at a very early age!
runningbear on 7/17/2008

plucky I agree that kids' habits start with the parents. Unfortunately, in our overly-busy lifestyles, convenience rules over common sense and I think that's what you're going to run up against mostly in your crusade (which is very admirable, BTW! :) If you could blow up all of the fast food joints, you'd be off to a great start (hmmm, crusade or jihad?)

I like your suggestion about theme night, esp the Japanese meal sitting on the floor - sounds fun. It also brings up a good point that eating together as a family is a huge step in the right direction.
plucky on 7/17/2008

runningbear Thanks for reading it. Kids' health is kind of my personal crusade.
runningbear on 7/17/2008 in response to OldeButGoode

OldeButGoode Very important issue ! Thanks !
OldeButGoode on 7/17/2008


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