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Healthy Weight Kids Coalition of Southern Kentucky is a coalition of health-related professionals and organizations with the goal of preventing and treating the serious  problem of overweight in children.

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Ideas for Schools
 

CDC's "Healthy Youth" targets schools

A new web page by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) gives valuable information on getting healthy curricula for all aspects of child health, including Health Education, Physical Education, Health Services, Nutrition Services, and Counseling. Click here:  Healthy Youth!  and  Make a Difference at Your School

NIH Launches Media Smart Youth Program

How do children know the difference between real health information and junk food that is advertised in the media? Most of them don't! But a new program produced by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) gives a detailed curriculum for schools to use. The program consists of ten 90-minute lessons which are broken up into learning and activity periods. Children learn how to identify healthy foods, and which foods are merely "media hyped" but nutritionally poor. Download the whole program here: [NIH Media Smart Youth Program]

What do youth do in the Media-Smart Youth program?
  1. Media awarenessMedia awareness: The program uses 6 media questions that help young people learn to analyze and recognize ways the media tries to get their attention, and to evaluate these media messages for accuracy and for consistency with their ideas about being healthy.
  2. Nutrition: A variety of activities encourage youth to make healthy snack choices, Nutritionincluding fruits and vegetables, whole grains, and calcium-rich foods, and to reduce the amount of fat and added sugar they eat. Each lesson includes a Snack Break during which young people learn to make a nutritious snack and receive a recipe to take home and share with their families.
  3. Physical activityPhysical activity: Participants learn the importance of daily physical activity for good health and develop strategies for becoming more active. A 10-minute Action Break during each lesson engages youth in a fun physical activity.
  4. Media production: In each lesson, youth express what they learn by creating a Mini-Production, in which they develop their own media messages. The Big Production, the program's final project, lets youth to create a media project (such as a public service announcement, a poster, a Web page, etc.) that promotes healthy nutrition and physical activity to their peers. In this way, they learn by doing - taking what they know about how the media works and putting it into practice in their own media project.

High School Football Teams Encourage Obesity

A research letter in JAMA (Journal of the American Medical Association) in Jan 2007, demonstrates what we have all noticed in the past, that high school football pushes kids to become obese. The bigger the team's linemen the better inertia they supply for the line, so coaches encourage the players to gain weight to the point of morbid obesity!

The study, by Drs Eisenmann and Laurson at Iowa State University, measured the BMI in 3683 high school linemen during last year's football season. Of these "athletes" 73% were over the 85th percentile for age and 45% were over the 95th percentile. The health implications are horrifying. These children have been  intentionally placed at high-risk for diabetes, heart disease and a host of other chronic diseases for years to come, many for life.

 

Dr Taras Outlines Obesity Problems in Schools

American Academy of Pediatrics article about how schools can impact the obesity epidemic in children.

[ Dr Taras article]

 

Toolkit for School and Community Education

The Healthy Weight Kids Coalition has developed a toolkit for presentations in schools and community groups. Teachers present relevant info, cultural issues, results of our survey, nutrition facts, and strategies for bringing about changes.

Contact Healthy Weight Kids Coalition to get a toolkit with educational materials, sample foods, and teaching plans, at a cost of $75 per kit. Some kits are already in use at Natcher Elementary School.

Educational Toolkit
This is the actual toolkit.

Health Report Cards

Progressive schools, such as Natcher School in Bowling Green, KY, are starting a new trend: include a health report card in addition to each child's academic report card. A "Fitnessgram" is prepared for each child, and includes BMI, aerobic capacity, muscle strength, endurance, flexibility, and overall activity. The report is produced by software developed by the Cooper Institute in Texas.  The software also adds the interpretation of the numbers given in each section of the report. Rather than assign a letter grade to each parameter, a bar graph shows where the measurement lies in relation to a "fitness zone". Find out more at the Cooper Institute website: www.cooperinst.org.

 

Article from the St Petersburg Times

Here is an excellent article about how many schools are dealing with the obesity problem. [full text]