Posts Tagged ‘michelle obama’

Can Michelle Obama Reverse Childhood Obesity?

March 15th, 2010

Michelle Obama and her war against childhood obesity is in the news again.

In the article that she has written an article for this week’s edition of Newsweek, the First Lady outlines her plan to transform America’s youth from fat to fit within the span of a single generation.

Here is a link to the article.

Why I Am Fighting Childhood Obesity

We can solve this problem in one generation

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And while I personally believe that big social programs such as these are more effective at spending money than affecting any sort of meaningful change, I want to know what you think.

And I made it easy with this handy-dandy Poll Daddy poll.

So, make your selection and then send send this link to all of your Facebook friends, Twitter followers, etc…

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(I have also included the entire article in the post – see below)

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Michelle on a Mission

How we can empower parents, schools, and the community to battle childhood obesity.

By Michelle Obama | NEWSWEEK

Published Mar 14, 2010

From the magazine issue dated Mar 22, 2010

For years, we’ve known about the epidemic of childhood obesity in America. We’ve heard the statistics—how one third of all kids in this country are either overweight or obese. We’ve seen the effects on how our kids feel, and how they feel about themselves. And we know the risks to their health and to our economy—the billions of dollars we spend each year treating obesity-related conditions like heart disease, diabetes, and cancer.

But we also know that it wasn’t always like this. Back when many of us were growing up, we led lives that kept most of us at a pretty healthy weight. We walked to school every day, ran around at recess and gym and for hours before dinner, and ate home-cooked meals that always seemed to have a vegetable on the plate.

For many kids today, those walks to school have been replaced by car and bus rides. Afternoons playing outside have been replaced with afternoons inside with TV, videogames, and the Internet. And with many parents working longer hours, or multiple jobs, they don’t have time for family meals around the table anymore.

It’s now clear that between the pressures of today’s economy and the breakneck pace of modern life, the well-being of our kids has too often gotten lost in the shuffle.

And let’s be honest with ourselves: our kids didn’t do this to themselves. Our kids don’t decide what’s served in the school cafeteria or whether there’s time for gym class or recess. Our kids don’t choose to make food products with tons of sugar and sodium in supersize portions, and then have those products marketed to them everywhere they turn. And no matter how much they beg for fast food and candy, our kids shouldn’t be the ones calling the shots at dinnertime. We’re in charge. We make these decisions.

That’s actually the good news—that we can decide to solve this problem. That’s why we started Let’s Move, a nationwide campaign with a single goal: to solve the problem of childhood obesity in a generation, so that children born today can reach adulthood at a healthy weight.

Let’s Move is not about trying to turn back the clock to when we were kids, or cooking five-course meals from scratch every night. No one has time for that. And it’s not about saying no to everything either. There’s a place for cookies and ice cream, burgers and fries—that’s part of the fun of childhood.

Instead, Let’s Move is about families making manageable changes that fit with their schedules, their budgets, and their needs and tastes. It’s about giving parents the tools they need to keep their families healthy and fit, and getting more nutritious food—more fresh fruits, vegetables, and whole grains, and less sugar, fat, and salt—into our nation’s schools. It’s about helping grocery stores serve communities that don’t have access to fresh foods, and finding new ways to help our kids stay physically active in school and at home.

Achieving all this won’t be easy. This isn’t something we can fix with a bill in Congress or an executive order from the president. I’ve spoken with many experts about this issue, and not a single one has said that the solution to childhood obesity is to have the government tell people what to do.

Instead, it’s about what all of us can do to help our kids lead active, healthy lives: parents making healthier choices for their families; mayors and governors doing their part to build healthier cities and states; and the private sector doing its part as well—from food manufacturers offering healthier options to retailers understanding that what’s good for kids and families can be good for businesses too.

That’s why I’ve been traveling the country, speaking to groups ranging from PTAs to food manufacturers, to elected officials, to school food-service employees, asking all of them to be a part of Let’s Move. And since this campaign began, several major school suppliers have already agreed to improve the quality of their food, doubling the amount of fresh produce they serve to our children. The nation’s largest beverage companies have agreed to provide clearly visible information about calories on the front of their products, as well as on vending machines and soda fountains. The American Academy of Pediatrics has begun urging its members to screen children for obesity and to actually write out prescriptions for parents detailing how to address it. And we’ve started a Web site—LetsMove.gov—with tips on eating well and staying fit.

Changes like these are only the beginning—and we’ve got a long way to go to reach our goals. But I’m confident that if we each do our part, and all work together, we can ensure that our kids have not just the opportunities they need to succeed, but the strength and endurance to seize those opportunities: to excel in school, pursue the careers of their dreams, keep up with their own kids, and live to see their grandkids grow up—maybe even their great-grandkids too. That is the goal of Let’s Move, and that is my mission as first lady.

Find this article at http://www.newsweek.com/id/234885

© 2010

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Jamie Oliver v.s. America’s Childhood Obesity Epidemic

February 12th, 2010

Last week it was Michelle Obama.

This week it’s British celeb-chef Jamie Oliver making an appeal to the American public…begging them to change their food & lifestyle habits in an attempt to save their children from a shortened and unhealthy future.

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So, what do you think?

Personally, I question the effectiveness of big government social programs like the First Lady’s Let’s Move program. I think that change is most effective when it happens at the grassroots level.

And while I don’t know if we should consider a multi-million dollar reality tv show to be “grassroots”, we all know about the powerful effect that television has upon on our lives.
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Maybe instead of tv causing obesity, it can help solve the problem.
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If you have someone in your family who needs to lose weight, please forward this article.

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Will Michelle Obama’s “Let’s Move” program be successful in reversing America’s Childhood Obesity Epidemic?

February 10th, 2010

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FLOTUS tackles America’s FATNESS

February 3rd, 2010

Like previous First Ladies, Michelle Obama has found her First Lady Issue – and luckily for America, it’s Childhood Obesity.

America has to do something about childhood obesity…NOW.

Our collective lifestyle is essentially a perfect storm that ensures that our children are going to keep getting fatter and sicker year after year.

But, what are we supposed to do.

  • Most families require two incomes…ergo home cooked meals are hard to come by.
  • America’s food producers make a greater profit on processed “food in a box” than they do on fruit, vegetables, meat, eggs, etc… so we can’t expect them to lead the healthy eating parade.
  • Between our anti-pedestrian neighborhoods and our fear of strangers, our kids don’t play outside anymore. I remember as a kid being outside for hours playing sports and doing kid stuff. I bet you do too. When was the last time your kids spent an entire Saturday outside in the fresh air, running around doing something good for their health?
  • Add to this tv, video games, insane amounts of homework, the internet, the fact we drive everywhere, mega malls, etc….

It all seems pretty grim, doesn’t it.

But, like the first Lady says, “childhood obesity is imminently solveable”

We just need a good plan.

And that’s where we are right now. At the planning stage.

No big gov’t involvement…yet. No big corporate sponsored advertising campaigns. No new taxes or regulations.

So, before all of that happens, America’s parents might want to take 15 minutes and think about what help they want from their government so that they can keep their children lean, fit & healthy.

If you need some help getting started,perhaps these articles can give you some ideas.

And I would love to hear your suggestions.

Heck, I would love to assemble all of your suggestions and forward them to the First Lady.

So, think about it and leave a comment.

Or email her yourself via the White House Contact Form.

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Sesame Street v.s. Childhood Obesity

November 10th, 2009

grover sesame street exercise

Sesame Street has joined the battle against childhood obesity.

First, it was Grover getting into the gym and pumping some iron.

Then, it was the Cookie Monster kicking his cookie addiction and switching to a diet heavy on fruits and vegetables.

Things were looking good in this battle between fit and fat.

Unfortunately, not everyone believed in the cause. There were traitors amongst us….

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But luckily, for every Stephen Colbert, there is a Michelle Obama, willing to stand up against video games and Twinkies and Big Gulps.

On this weeks 40th anniversary show, First Lady Michelle Obama helped a group of children plant a vegetable garden on Sesame Street.

And just like those vegetable seeds will eventually take root and grow into mature plants, let’s hope that the message of eating healthy and exercising daily will take root in the minds of a new generation of Sesame Street viewers.
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Michelle Obama’s Organic Garden upsets Big Agri

April 23rd, 2009

America’s powerful agribusiness lobby has hit back at Michelle Obama’s decision to make her new White House kitchen garden entirely organic, urging her to consider the use of appropriate “crop protection products”.

Shortly after she got to work on the plot, Mrs Obama received a letter from the Mid-America CropLife Association (MACA), which represents the companies producing the pesticides and fertilizers underpinning “conventional” American agriculture

In the letter, MACA “does not mention the word “organic”, nor even “pesticide” or “fertiliser” but highlights the role played by farmers in preventing soil erosion and the massive yields achievable thanks to technological advances – technologies that can see a single acre produce almost 20 tonnes of strawberries of 110,000 heads of lettuce in a season”.

The letter “respectfully” encourages Mrs Obama to recognise the role played by conventional agriculture in feeding America’s growing population and is carefully worded not to be provocative.

But Bonnie McCarvel, the MACA executive director, was not so diplomatic in an e-mail forwarding the letter to MACA supporters and members, in which she said: “While a garden is a great idea, the thought of it being organic made (us) shudder.”

Whoops.

I bet that MACA hadn’t planned on that email getting leaked.

This locavore blog broke the story – you can find the letter and leaked email here.

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Reference

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The Future of Fast Food

March 19th, 2009

veggies-french-fries-vegetables

A new study, published in the Millbank Quarterly, looked at the impact that government taxes and subsidies might have upon the growing trend of obesity in the United States.

Based upon their research, “nontrivial pricing interventions might have a measurable effect on Americans’ weight outcomes, particularly those of children and adolescents, low-SES (socio-economic status) populations, and those most at risk for overweight.

Even though they would have only a small impact on individual behavior, such interventions could have a large impact at the population level when applied broadly.

And what do they mean by nontrivial pricing interventions?

The empirical evidence supports a multipronged approach, especially for children and adolescents, of changing relative prices by both taxing less healthy, energy-dense foods and subsidizing healthier, less-dense foods.

Aaahhh, taxes and subsidies = nontrivial pricing interventions

The Justification for Increased Taxes and Subsidies

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The researchers found that the price of junk food and sugar had a large effect on adolescent and adult rates of obesity.

Well, that makes sense. How many chubby little kids can afford a $29.95 Happy Meal.

As well, subsidies of fruits and vegetables were also estimated to improve children’s and adolescents’ weight outcomes.

Cheaper fruits & veg…why didn’t I think of that.

And finally, this price sensitivity was found to be strongest with overweight and low-SES children.

And it just so happens that low-SES kids have higher rates of obesity than their Richie Rich schoolmates.

So, there you go.

It’s all about the kids. The poor little fat kids.

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Of course, it’s the fat parents of those poor little fat kids who are going to have to foot the bill.

And dammit, Americans don’t like taxes.

or, do they?.

Currently, state taxes on sodas and various junk foods are relatively low, and no state or local government has used these taxes to promote healthier eating and reduce obesity.

See, cheap subsidized corn + low “food” taxes = more Extra-Value meals per citizen.

But wait….

The same was generally true for state cigarette taxes before the public became aware of the health
consequences of smoking
, when cigarette excise taxes were only a few cents per pack and revenue generation was their primary purpose.

uh, oh…

But as evidence accumulated about the health and economic consequences of tobacco use and as research demonstrated the effectiveness of higher taxes and prices in reducing tobacco use, governments have increasingly used these taxes to promote public health.

Inflation-adjusted state cigarette taxes more than tripled, on average, from 1982 to 2007, contributing to a more than 160 percent rise in average cigarette prices during this period.

In turn, these price increases have been credited with driving most of the recent declines in adult smoking prevalence.

Dammit!

The days of Big Gulps and Super-Size-Me are just about over.

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Reference

Powell et al. Food Prices and Obesity: Evidence and Policy Implications for Taxes and Subsidies. Milbank Quarterly, 2009; 87 (1): 229 DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-0009.2009.00554.x

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