Top ten tips to prevent childhood
obesity
From the Village News article February 2007
Childhood obesity has
reached epidemic levels in the US, with more than nine million children
over the age of 6 now classified as obese. The California Association
for Nurse Practitioners offers the following tips to encourage healthy
lifestyles for children.
- Educate yourself. Talk to your healthcare provider and seek
out articles about eating healthy and keeping you and your kids healthy
and active.
- Make meals a family affair. Include our kids in cooking healthy
meals to set a precedent of healthy eating.
- Be prepared. Especially with smaller children, have healthy
snacks
on hand. It could be the difference between fast food and Cheerios and
a banana.
- Monitor your children. Take measurements of your children as they
grow. Keep tabs on their growth and weight gain and compare to normal
standards to catch a weight problem at its start.
- Know your serving sizes. Many people don’t look at the serving
sizes on the back of the products they consume. While you might think a
20-ounce soda is 100 calories, it is actually 250!
- Avoid sweetened beverages. Make sure that children are consuming
adequate water and 100-percent fruit juice; sweetened soft drinks
provide no vitamins or healthy antioxidants and should be avoided by
adults as well as children.
- Limit prepackaged foods. Many convenience items such as frozen
breakfasts and prepackaged lunches are high in preservatives and
artificial additives. Take the time to prepare your children healthy
foods, not easy foods that lack proper nutrition.
- Limit TV and video games. The amount of time that kids spend
watching TV or playing video games should not exceed two hours a day.
- Get them out of the house. Enroll your kids in sports to maintain
an active lifestyle. If your child dislikes sports, there are many
clubs that can keep kids active, like dance, fencing and even acting!
- Don’t force your kids to eat. Set specific meal and snack times,
but let your children learn what makes them feel satisfied, not full to
the brim. Doing so can prevent chronic overeating in the future.