Sue Scheff: Teen Obesity, Life Expectancy and What Can You Do?

by Sue Scheff on Mar 28, 2010


Last week I wrote about Food Revolution, and what exactly is in our school’s cafeteria.  It was one of the most read articles.  It is shocking to actually read in detail what we put into our bodies, and especially what our kids are eating.  I applaud Jamie Oliver who is just about single handedly trying to make healthy changes, one school at a time.  According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the problem of teenage obesity is now at its highest level in U.S. history. About 15% of teens are obese today, compared to just 5% in the 1960s. Last week, Connect With Kids posted another exceptional article about this timely subject.

Source: Connect with Kids

Obesity and Life Expectancy

“I remember dreading going to the doctors because they just told me how overweight I was.”

– Catherine, 16

Sixteen-year-old Catherine attends a Jazzercise class five times a week. She’s trying to dance her way out of a problem she’s had since she was a little girl: obesity.

“I never knew what portion sizes were, or when I was full, because I just ate to the max,” she says.

In the third grade, Catherine needed special clothing tailored to fit. In the sixth grade, she weighed more than 200 pounds.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the problem of teenage obesity is now at its highest level in U.S. history. About 15% of teens are obese today, compared to just 5% in the 1960s.

“And I don’t want to live like that. I want to be active, I want to do a lot of things, I want to meet people, I want to travel,” Catherine says. “Just like everyone else, I have dreams.”

But those dreams may be cut short if she doesn’t lose some weight.

But those dreams are at risk.

Researchers at the National Institutes of Health have been following almost 5000 children in Arizona for over 40 years. The studies show that the heaviest kids are twice as likely to die young… from cancer, infection, heart disease… diabetes…

“[The formulas] very, very effectively show that the younger you are, and the more obese you are, the more years of life you lose at the end,” says Dr. Ranveig Elvebakk, a bariatric physician. “It is anywhere from three to 20 years on the person who is 20 years of age and overweight.”

The health effects of obesity are well known: heart disease, diabetes, stroke and other chronic problems that cause premature death. The earlier you catch a weight problem, the easier it will be for your child to change and the less damage the weight will cause on his or her body.

Elvebakk says it is important to remember that the epidemic of obesity is NOT a problem of genetics.

“It is our culture that makes us fat; it’s not genes,” she says. “Our gene pool has remained unchanged over the past 59,000 years. There is no change in genes over the last 10 years. What makes us overweight is our lifestyle and the way we think about food.”

She says parents should insist on exercise and nutrition from an early age. But in Catherine’s family, it’s the kids who are now asking for better nutrition.

“When I go to the store, I used to buy all this kind of junk food and keep it in the cabinet for them, and now they tell me no, you’re not supposed to bring that home,” explains Lorraine Allen, Catherine’s mother.

With nutrition and exercise, Catherine is slowly shedding the pounds. She’s trading them in for more years on the end of her life – and more time to fulfill her dreams.

Healthy Lifestyle Begins with Exercise, Balanced Diet

People who are severely obese as adolescents or in their early 20s can expect to have significantly shorter lives, according to research published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Researchers focused on subjects whose body mass index (BMI) was more than 24, the reference for adults aged 18 to 85. BMI is calculated based on weight and height. People who have a BMI over 30 are considered obese. The study, based on years of federal health survey data of thousands of people, examined the extent to which obesity could affect years of life lost. For every degree of being overweight, younger adults generally had greater years of life lost than older adults. Specifically, it was discovered that severely obese (BMI over 45) young females could lose four to eight years from their life expectancy. The results for males were even more astounding. They could have 12 to 20 years cut off of their lives!

Why is obesity such a problem for today’s children and adolescents? The Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) cites the following causes for childhood obesity:

  • Overweight in children and adolescents is generally caused by lack of physical activity, unhealthy eating patterns or a combination of the two, with genetics and lifestyle both playing important roles in determining a child’s weight.
  • Society has become very sedentary. Television, computer and video games contribute to children’s inactive lifestyles.
  • Forty-three percent of adolescents watch more than two hours of television each day.
  • Children, especially girls, become less active as they move through adolescence.

Because diabetes, hypertension and other obesity-related chronic diseases are now more common in adolescents, the recent study results highlight the importance of weight control in the nation’s youth through more physical activity and better dietary habits. Several organizations have found that today’s youth are considered the most inactive generation in history. In fact, the National Association for Sports & Physical Education reports that only 25% of all kids in the United States are physically active. And since daily physical education has been eliminated from schools in all but one state (Illinois), the burden now rests on the shoulders of parents to encourage their children to be more active.

Tips for Parents

With the CDC reporting that almost a third of children and adolescents are obese or overweight, it is now more important than ever to encourage your child to maintain a high level of physical activity. The American Council on Exercise offers the following tips for incorporating exercise into your child’s daily activities:

  • Set an example for your child and treat exercise as something to be done on a regular basis, like brushing your teeth or cleaning your room.
  • Invite your child to participate in vigorous household tasks, such as gardening, washing the car or raking leaves.
  • Go biking, rock climbing or inline skating with your child.
  • Jump rope or shoot baskets with your child.
  • Plan outings and activities that involve some walking, like a trip to the zoo, a nature hike or even a trip to the mall.

The other component of maintaining a healthy lifestyle is practicing proper eating habits. Instead of high-calorie foods and snacks, provide your child with fruits and low- or non-fat foods. The American Obesity Association (AOA) does not recommend dieting for teens because it can prevent them from growing to their full height. Instead, it suggests that your teen “eat lean” and try some of these healthy snack options to get the nutrition he or she needs:

  • Dried fruit mixed with sunflower seeds
  • Bagels with peanut butter
  • Low-fat cheese and crackers
  • Baby carrots dipped in low-fat salad dressing
  • Baked chips, low-fat cheese and salsa
  • Fat-free popcorn with parmesan cheese
  • Yogurt smoothie
  • Frozen bananas
  • Fresh fruit

Exercise and nutrition go hand in hand, but without your support, your adolescent will have a tough time maintaining a healthy lifestyle. The U.S. Surgeon General’s Office offers the following strategies for helping your teen stay fit physically and emotionally:

  • Let your child know that he or she is loved and appreciated whatever his or her weight. An overweight child probably knows better than anyone else that he or she has a weight problem. Overweight children need support, acceptance and encouragement from their parents.
  • Focus on your child’s health and positive qualities, not your child’s weight.
  • Try not to make your child feel different if he or she is overweight but focus on gradually changing your family’s physical activity and eating habits.
  • Be a good role model for your child. If your child sees you enjoying healthy foods and physical activity, he or she is more likely to do the same now and for the rest of his or her life.
  • Realize that an appropriate goal for many overweight children is to maintain their current weight while growing normally in height.

References

  • American Council on Exercise
  • American Obesity Association
  • Centers of Disease Control and Prevention
  • Journal of the American Medical Association
  • National Association for Sports & Physical Education
  • U.S. Surgeon General’s Office

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Sue Scheff: Teen Fitness: 5 Tips for Helping Busy Teens Stay Physically Active

by Sue Scheff on Jun 26, 2009


teenexerciseSummer is here!  Teen fitness is important to keeping healthy and physically fit.  Putting away the technology and going for a bike ride, jogging and more.  Here are 5 tips to help you encourage your teens to get moving!

Teen Fitness: 5 Tips for Helping Busy Teens Stay Physically Active
by Jamie Jefferson

Kids love to romp around on the playground, but as they grow into their teenage years and their schedules get busier, lots of kids start spending more time with their computer screen or video game console than with their scooters or bicycles.

But teenagers can particularly benefit from the boost in energy and self-esteem that comes with staying physically active. Here are five tips for helping your kids stay active during their teenage years.

1. Keep it low-pressure. You and your teenager have probably heard the experts say that teens need physical exercise each day, but it might be more appealing to your child if you don’t make exercise sound like just another thing they need to jam into their already crazy schedules.

Talk to them about how exercise is about releasing some of their energy and stress.

Talk to them about how it’s something their body needs to do, and encourage them to get out in nature to exercise as much as possible.

There is something so naturally restorative about getting your body moving each day in nature. My children were saying just today how our daily half-hour hike helps them to feel peaceful all day because, whenever they get tense, they can remember the peace that resides in the forest.

2. Give your teenager lots of options. If your teenager doesn’t like to run or jog or bike, suggest she take a walk with a friend instead. And stay alert to your teenager expressing interest in a new kind of physical activity, whether it’s gymnastics, skateboarding, dancing, ice skating, swimming, basketball, soccer, football or skiing.

You can also get some free weights for your home. Make sure that whatever you set up is a low-pressure environment. Competitive sports can be a great way to stay in shape, but it’s not the only way.

3. If your teens express some resistance to going out on a walk or a bike ride, remind them that everyone has resistance sometimes to getting outside and getting active. Share with them when you feel resistance. Once your teenager has been out moving for 10 minutes, ask him again how he feels.

4. Sign up for a fun run or a walk for charity. This is a great activity for the family to engage in together. 5. Make sure that you are exercising every day, too. When your teenagers see you weaving physical activity into your daily life, they will be more apt to follow suit. Then you’ll both benefit.

Physical activity can help your teenager develop a healthy self-esteem and body image while reducing their stress and helping them to sleep better and maintain focus at school. Just remember to give them lots of options and to keep the pressure to a minimum.

Jamie Jefferson writes for Susies-Coupons.com. Visit today to find discounts on jeans as well as skate and surf clothing.

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Sue Scheff: Teen Health – Can exercise help people learn?

by Sue Scheff on Apr 25, 2009


pe4lifelogo

PE4Life is a great website to help parents get involved in more activities with their kids.  Can exercise help you learn?  Check out this recent clip on CBC in Canada – http://www.cbc.ca/national/blog/special_feature/brain_gains/ (On the page click on Brain Gains to watch the entire piece). 

Source: PE4Life

Parents are busy with a full workday, helping their children with homework, engaging their children in after school activities, and so on. This doesn’t leave a whole lot of time for physical activity in your own lives. Do you realize that schools have devalued and cut physical education to the point that the majority of children get one day of PE per week? Children today have a shorter life expectancy than their parents for the first time in one hundred years because of the epidemic of obesity, according to Dr. William Klish, Professor of Pediatrics and Head of Pediatric Gastroenterology at Baylor College of Medicine. Lack of PE at school is a disservice to your child’s health. Speak up. Demand that your school offers daily quality physical education. Use PE4life as a resource partner to enhance your school’s PE program. A recent study revealed that 81% of teachers and 85% of parents favor requiring students to take physical education every day at every grade level. As parents, you can rally people in your community to get involved by ordering a PE4life Community Action kit video and show it to the PTA, the school board and other community groups. The next step is to invite PE4life to make a presentation to your school leaders, bring a team of people to train at a PE4life Academy, or invite PE4life to do an in-service for your school staff. As your resource partner, PE4life can provide these and many other services to your school as you work to get children more active and healthy.

The PE4life Approach to Physical Education:

  • Be offered to every child every day
  • Be available for all students, not just the athletically inclined
  • Provide a wide variety of sports and fitness activities to promote an active and healthy lifestyle  
  • Assess students on their personal progress toward fitness and physical activity goals
  • Incorporate technology on a regular basis
  • Extend beyond the walls of the gymnasium to form community and business partnerships
  •  

    Today’s “New P.E.,” as exemplified by PE4life, is a health-and-wellness-based approach to physical education that caters to all students, not just the athletically inclined.  Students are encouraged to pursue a variety of sports and physical activities (team and individual) – for a lifetime. 

     

  • Get InvolvedBecome a Friend of PE4life, get your community involved, sign up up for the PE4life newsletter and communicate to government leaders.
  • News & InfoGet the latest information on physical education, childhood obesity,  exercise and the brain, youth fitness and legislative news.  Also link to other great websites.
  • ResultsReview research findings and measurable outcomes of PE programs.
  • Grant InfoFind creative sources of funding for the physical education program at your child’s school and a forum where you can ask questions or share your thoughts and successes.
  • PE4life Program ServicesFind information about our Program Service Packages, how to order our services, training dates, academy locations, and testimonials.
  • EventsFind dates for Academy Training, National PE4life Day, PE4life Workshops, and PE Conferences.

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Sue Scheff: The Alliance for a Healthier Generation

by Sue Scheff on Apr 24, 2009


Summer is almost here – help your kids get healthy, eat healthy and get outside and get active!  Promoting positive eating habits and regular excercise can help build your child’s self esteem and help them to make better choices!

eatveggiesSabrina Bryan has teamed up with The Alliance for a Healthier Generation to launch their new campaign called empowerME by challenging  today’s youth to make their own workout video!  The top five finalists will receive autographed copies of Sabrina’s newest BYOU DVD and the winner will also receive a personalized video message from Sabrina.   For more information on The Alliance for a Healthier Generation, the empowerME campaign and Sabrina Bryan’s video contest please visit www.empowerME2B.org.

About empowerME:  empowerMe is a by kids, for kids movement that inspires today’s youth to eat healthier and move more, motivate each other, and to be a solution to America’s obesity epidemic.  One million kids have already joined the movement and we want one million more by 2010!    For more information about the empowerME campaign, please visit: empowerme2b.org 

About the Alliance for a Healthier Generation: The Alliance for a Healthier Generation is a partnership between the William J. Clinton Foundation and the American Heart Association created to reduce childhood obesity and empower kids to make healthy lifestyle choices. For more information on the Alliance for a Healthier Generation, please visit: www.HealthierGeneration.org  

There has been such a huge jump in childhood obesity and there is no time better than now to join the fight against it!

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Sue Scheff: Teens and Physical Education – Pumping Up the Brain

by Sue Scheff on Jan 31, 2009


The CBS Early Show – Pumping Up the Brain
Watch now: http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=4764808n
Researchers are finding that exercise can not only keep you fit, but make you smarter. A school in Illinois has developed a program that gets students moving and learning. Debbye Turner Bell reports.
In SPARK, John J. Ratey, M.D., embarks upon a fascinating and entertaining journey through the mind-body connection, presenting startling research to prove that exercise is truly our best defense against everything from depression to ADD to addiction to aggression to menopause to Alzheimer’s. Filled with amazing case studies (such as the revolutionary fitness program in Naperville, Illinois, which has put this school district of 19,000 kids first in the world of science test scores), SPARK is the first book to explore comprehensively the connection between exercise and the brain. It will change forever the way you think about your morning run—or, for that matter, simply the way you think.

Visit www.pe4life.org for more great information.

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Sue Scheff: Great Teen Gift Ideas for the Holidays

by Sue Scheff on Dec 17, 2008


Give a Friend of PE4life Membership!


With the holidays quickly approaching and the economy quickly dwindling, it’s important more important than ever to purchase gifts wisely. This year, instead of wasting your money on another expensive kitchen gadget, why not give them a gift that invests in the future and improves the lives of children across the country?

PE4life is offering you the chance to purchase a Friend of PE4life subscription for a loved one. You can choose from four levels of giving – Rookie, All Star, Champ, or MVP – one for every price range. By joining this exclusive opportunity, the recipient will become an appreciated contributor to the organization that has trained teams from 38 states and five countries, impacting more than 2 million school children! Remember to visit the Pro Shop for other holiday gift ideas!
Learn more.

Tags: , , , , , , ,