The European Union's heath commission released some frightening, 
but not very surprising numbers, regarding childhood obesity today: More
 than 400,000 children become overweight each year in Europe (!). The 
numbers for North America is no better. The 2 leading causes of this 
epedemic are: poor eating habits combined with a lack of activity. No 
surprise there either. This is, of course, a very complex problem and 
not easy to solve. In my humble opinion, here are some key issues to 
deal with:
1. Daily activity - we need to encourage children to be
 more active. Much more active. One key problem is the way 90% of all 
kids entertain themselves - Playstation, TV, Movies etc. Instead of 
this, lets bring back the joy and wonder of outdoor physical activity. 
Lets bring our kids out into the park, forest, mountains, back-yard, 
whatever is available. Encourage the wonder and excitement of being 
outdoors, go exploring in the forest, look for animals, go fishing, 
skiing, you name it. Any outdoor acitivity that is fun will teach a 
young child to love and appreciate what lies outside the 35" Panasonic 
television set. This, I believe, is one of the most important things we 
can do to combat the problem. It's important that it's fun and exciting,
 not a drag or boring.
2. Phyiscal activity in school - for some 
reason the weekly amount of phyiscal education in our schools have 
dropped. This trend must be reversed. Lets increase the amount 
many-folds.
3. Sports - when we enroll children in sports, lets 
focus on encouraging and establishing good attitudes towards training 
and living healthy and not focus so much on specialization at an early 
age or pressure the children into performance oriented goals. That can 
come later. And, we must face one very important fact: taking your son 
or daughter twice a week to football (soccer) practice does not fulfill 
the entire need for physical activity that week. Not even close. Studies
 have shown that adult-organized activities lead to 70% inactivity in 
the children. It is much better to let them "run with the ball" and only
 supervise.
4. Over-Protecting - I know this is probably easy for 
me to say, since I have no children, but parents are much too 
overprotective of their kids. Take a look at an average school 
playground, it will either be completely clear of natural obstacles 
(trees etc), or if there are any - the branches are all cut off to 
prevent the children from climbing in it. "We" are all so concerned and 
afraid that the kids might get hurt, that we create this un-natural 
environment for them. Let children explore their limitations, and yes, 
that means falling down from a tree, bleeding a little bit and maybe 
even having to go to the doctor once in a while. I think children are 
much more resilient then what we think. This over-protecting creates 
children that are, for a lack of a better word, "sissies". They are 
afraid of everything, they don't want to go outside if it's a bit cold 
or rainy etc. I also think that this over-protecting will lead to the 
child looking for other, more dangerous, ways of getting an adrenaline 
rush later in life (drugs, alcahol etc).
5. Eating habits at home -
 we need to create a simple, good and healthy diet for children in the 
home. No more soda, fast-food, donuts, candy and other higher sugar and 
high fat content food. Lets go back to the traditional, simple diet that
 we used to eat. Some people might say that it is a "punishment" to the 
child if they can't have a donut and a soft drink, hell no! As I was 
growing up - I only had soft drinks and candy twice a year (Christmas 
and New Years). That was it! Was I unhappy? No, I think I had the best 
childhood anyone could possibly ask for. I was 18 years old or so the 
first time I had fast-food (training camp in Southern Europe). Have good
 healthy meals, for breakfast, lunch and dinner. That may mean spending 
more time cooking, versus ordering a pizza etc, but think of what you 
are doing for your child (and yourself). And I'm not talking about all 
these "popular" diets (Atkins, no-fat and whatever else there is). No, 
I'm talking about a simple diet put together with good, raw products. 
Also, lets bring vegetables and fruit back into our lives.
6. Food
 in the schools - Walk into a public school now and take a look at what 
is available for kids to eat. It is amazing! How the heck can we let 
this happen???? Soft drink machines line the walls, vending machines 
filled with candy, VERY poor food served in the cafeteria etc. I don't 
know what to say about that, other than WTF!?
7. As a society we 
need to make changes - force the schools to serve good food. Remove the 
poor food items from school property. Increase PE in our schools, teach 
children about healthy living habits. Let them play outside, even if 
it's a bit cold...
8. And finally - food manufacturers. Take a 
look at McDonalds for example. What a great, great marketing plan they 
have. Happy-meals, toys, a clown as a spokes-man, play-rooms inside the 
restaurant, a McDonalds strategically placed close to pretty much every 
school in the western world and a fantastic ad-campaign on every channel
 that children might watch. Can you get any closer to a "brain-washing" 
program? How the heck can possibly a kid not want to eat McDonalds 
several times a week after all that? And it's not just McDonalds, they 
are all doing it. Every other food product on the market is filled with 
unhealthy, un-natural "stuff". Can we / should we as a society enforce 
what food producers can and cannot market? I don't know. But one thing 
is for sure, I'm scared, very scared, of trying to raise a child in this
 world. I wish we could get this problem onto the international agenda 
more. Forget about the flu-pandemic. There is a pandemic going on right 
now, and it's obesity.
By
         Mags M    
 
 
 
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