Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Tackling Childhood Obesity



Childhood obesity is a serious problem in the United States. Between 16 and 33 percent of children and adolescents are obese. The recent statistic in Indiana is 29.9 % of children are obese. Consequently, unhealthy weight gain can be contributed to lack of exercise and poor diet. Obesity often occurs in children due to overweight parents. Children who are obese usually become overweight adults - and the cycle continues!

Changing family behaviors is crucial. Rather than singling out children the whole family must make healthy changes. Here are some helpful hints that can help:

• Start small. Gradual changes are easiest to incorporate into your daily routine, and to maintain long term. Start by making a few small changes, such as turning off the TV during dinner, switching from soda to skim milk or water, snack healthy such as apples and peanut butter instead of chips and cookies. Take a family walk or bike ride after dinner once a week. Increase activity each week.

• Set goals. Set realistic, measurable goals for each family member, and then establish family goals. For example, your child's goal might be to eat fruit for afternoon snacks. Your goal might be to take a brisk walk three days a week. The family's goal might be to limit fast-food meals to once a month.

• Recognize triggers. Be prepared for situations that will tempt you to fall back into bad habits. If you're used to eating popcorn at the movies, only bring enough money for admission, or agree that you'll share a small carton of popcorn rather than ordering separate treats.

• Celebrate accomplishment. Frequent rewards can help keep your family motivated. When your child meets a goal offer praise and attention instead of food rewards. When your family meets a goal, brainstorm healthy ways to celebrate your success. You might try a family movie night, a weekend picnic or a trip to a fun park.

• Keep it positive. Focus on healthy lifestyle changes, rather than your child's appearance or a number on the scale. Remember, treating childhood obesity will take some time and dedication to replace bad habits with new, healthier behaviors.

• Be Determined. It takes time to develop and maintain new healthy habits. Encourage everyone to not give up. Do your best as a parent to make it fun and educate on why it’s important to develop healthy habits now.

Making lifestyle changes can be challenging, especially when you're busy juggling the demands of everyday life. If your family encourages and supports each other, then most likely you will beat the obesity cycle. Eventually healthy habits will become routine, and you'll be on your way to overcoming childhood obesity and improving your family's health.

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