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Nowadays, it is not shocking
news to hear about a four year old child weighing more than 100 pounds.
Nor is it shocking news that we are seeing adult onset diabetes among
adolescents and young teens. Instead, the attention grabbing news is Atkins,
South Beach, Zone, and gastric bypass. Our nation has accepted the fact
that the average weight of Americans has increased, and are now obsessed
with how to reduce that weight. But are we doing this the right way?
There is no magic cure for
obesity. The only way is to prevent it, by leading a healthy lifestyle.
In order to do so, we have to start early, and maintain lifelong habits
of healthy living. Without a doubt, parents and caregivers have a tremendous
impact on their children’s eating behavior and physical activity.
Unfortunately, many of us lack the knowledge of basic nutrition, which
is not readily available in this fast paced age of television commercials,
fast foods, computers and video games. Reading food labels and choosing
which foods to buy can be as complicated and difficult as brain surgery.
Recognizing that it is always
easier, and more cost effective, to prevent than to treat obesity, various
agencies and organizations in our community have started prevention projects,
which focus on teaching parents and caregivers how to establish healthy
eating habits and increased physical activity for their children and themselves.
The Health Services Agency
started the “Fit Kids” pilot project two years ago. The target
population for this program is children between the ages of 4-8 years.
We provide classes to the parents and caregivers, involving the whole
family with at least one child who is at risk of becoming overweight.
Classes are provided once a month, in both English and Spanish. Classes
are taught using “Family Centered Education” techniques, which
involve both verbal education and "hands-on" activities. Topics
include healthy snacks, physical activity, keeping food records, etc Approximately,
100 English families and 180 Spanish families had participated in this
project. So far, referrals are only being accepted from the Agency’s
Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) Nutrition Program, and from the HSA
clinics and providers.
Similarly, the West Modesto
King Kennedy Neighborhood Collaborative started the “Kids Off the
Couch” Project two years ago, with funding from the Prop 10 Commission.
The target population is children from 0 to the age of five, who live
in the west Modesto neighborhood. They provide classes to parents and
caregivers on a bi-weekly basis. Activities, aside from the normal nutrition
and physical activity education sessions, also include cooking demonstrations
and field trips for parents and children to the supermarket, farmers market,
library, and the YMCA.
Both of these programs have
received rave reviews from the participants, who are mostly mothers and
grandmothers. They attend the classes not just to learn, but also to socialize,
share, and give support to each other. The importance of social support
cannot be underscored when a person is ready to make and maintain any
behavioral changes. One also has to remember that prevention programs
are only successful when they are continuous and long term. The Fit Kids
Program provides xx sessions of classes, while Kids Off the Couch is a
yearlong program. As one parent commented, “ We eat, go places,
it’s too much fun, and you feel good when you leave.” |