The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
use the term childhood “overweight” instead of childhood “obesity”
due to the social stigma often times attributed to children who
are overweight. Childhood “overweight” represents children who
are in the 95th percentile of all children’s combination of weight
and height measurements. Children “at risk for overweight” includes
children who are in the 85th to the 95th percentile of all children
measured.
There is an overweight epidemic among children both nationally
and in Tennessee. According to the measurements of over 30,000
students by Coordinated School Health and Tennessee Department
of Health staff in 2006, 43% of all Tennessee
children are either at-risk for overweight or overweight.
Why is this a concern?
Overweight and obese students face immediate health problems,
such as high cholesterol, hypertension, Type 2 diabetes, insulin
resistance, polycystic ovary syndrome, as well as emotional issues.
Excess weight in adolescence carried into adulthood also predisposes
youth for serious adult health risks such as coronary disease,
stroke, gallbladder disease, some types of cancer and osteoarthritis
of the weight–bearing joints. (Source: US Surgeon General, The
Surgeon General’s Call to Action to Prevent and Decrease Overweight
and Obesity, 2001)
Although the “bottom line” for weight gain is consuming more calories
than one expends, obesity is a chronic disease with multiple factors
contributing to its prevalence. The increase in obesity among children
and youth is linked to environmental and social conditions and
poor nutritional habits.
- Consumption of a high fat, high calorie diet
- Ever-increasing portion sizes
- Overindulgence or reliance on “fast foods”
- Skipping breakfast and lunch and eating the majority of calories
at night
- Eating when anxious or depressed for mood control (“food as
friend”)
- Eating in association with sedentary activities, such as watching
television
- Decreased physical activity (“couch potatoes”)*
* Source: National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney
Diseases, Take Charge of You Health: A Teenager’s Guide to
Better Health (2000) |