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7 Part Plan To Beating Childhood Obesity
By Michael Grose
Everyone from politicians to parents is talking about fighting the war against
childhood flab. It is odd that in a relatively wealthy countries such as the US
and Australia improving children’s health, weight and fitness should be a
problem but it appears to be a sticking point with many.
Childhood obesity in a developed country like Australia and the United States is
essentially a lifestyle issue. Children are overweight because they eat
inappropriate amounts and types of food and they don’t exercise enough. To put
it simply many children are stacking on the weight because calorie intake is
higher than calories burned.
Children’s lifestyles are generally a reflection of those who raise them so
parents need to figure heavily in any strategies put forward to improve the
health and wellbeing of the next generation.
The trouble is many parents have grown accustomed to outsourcing those hard to
deal with issues such as sexuality and drug education to schools and other
agencies. Children’ health and well-being is an issue that parents should take
prime responsibility for. Parents can beat childhood obesity rather than leave
it up to schools to fix or politicians to meddle with.
Here is a simple, fool-proof lifestyle plan that parents can adopt to ensure
their children grow up healthy and fit rather than overweight and unhealthy:
1. Limit the amount of children’s television, computer and electronic games
usage to a maximum of two hours a day. Very little physical exertion is needed
to watch TV or use other electronic equipment so for the sake of fitness their
use of these needs to be limited. Send children outside, suggest they walk or
ride to a friend’s house or even suggest they have a friend or four over to
play. One third of Australian children would prefer to play computer games than
play outside so parents may have to be assertive and, at times, over-zealous
but so be it.
2. Children walk or ride a bike to school each day. Recent Roy Morgan research
revealed that 60 per cent of Australian 6 – 13 year olds would like to walk to
school but only 30 per cent actually do. Most children would get their required
minimum two hours of exercise a week by walking or riding their bikes to
school. This may mean that parents may have to walk to school with younger
children or ensure they are adequately supervised. Bike riding is not safe for
every child but more bike tracks in the vicinity of schools would be a great
start.
3. Keep unhealthy food out of the trolley and include more fruit. This may be
stating the bleeding obvious but as keepers of the family purse parents have
the main stake in what food goes in and what stays out of the shopping trolley.
It seems that parents are on the right track as more Australian children eat
fruit after school than sweet biscuits but even so the number of fruit eaters
can do with a boost. Only 43 per cent of Australian children eat fruit after
school so more fruit could be a good place to start.
4. Serve healthy meals at the table on a regular basis. The humble ritual that
sees adults and children who are related to each other breaking bread together
on a daily or at least regular basis has a lot going for it. Far from being a
refuelling stop mealtime is an opportunity for everyone to catch up and to
share good healthy, well-prepared food. True, busyness of life get in the way
of this healthy ritual but it is about getting our priorities right.
5. Parents play with their children or join them in a physical activity. The
family that plays together stays thin together could well be the motto of our
times. It should be easy for adults to sell their children on the virtues of
playing physical games outside as play comes before work in most children’s
dictionaries. Fathers tend to be the kings of play but work and other lifestyle
factors can get in the way.
6. Encourage children to be involved in at least one organised physical activity
each week. Some parents may need to be insistent but 88 per cent of Australian
children say they enjoy sport so getting children motivated for physical
activity shouldn’t be hard. There is no shortage of options for children these
days as there are activities and sports that cater of a diverse range of
interests, abilities and body types.
7. Parents model a healthy lifestyle. Do as I do not as I say is the idea here.
It is little use parents telling their kids to go out and play as they tuck
into their second wine or they slump into the couch. Modelling is the most
important tool in the armoury if we want children to develop sustained healthy
eating and exercise habits. For the record, a healthy lifestyle is one where
people talk to each other (ideal for emotional well-being), one where food and
alcohol intake occurs in moderation and physical activity is a natural part of
the day.
This plan has a great deal going for it. It is cost-free, easy to use and places
the responsibility where it lay – with parents. It also has the added bonus of
promoting healthy relationships as if they follow this plan parents and kids
should spend more time together which can’t be a bad thing.
For further ideas to help you raise happy children and resilient teenagers visit
www.parentingideas.com.au. While you are there subscribe to Happy Kids
newsletter and receive a free report - Seven ways to beat sibling rivalry.
Michael Grose is Australia's leading parenting educator. He is the author of six
books and gives over 100 presentations a year and appears regularly on
television, radio and in print.
Link to this page
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