March 31, 2008

Childhood Obesity - Helping your Child

Filed under: Obesity — admin @ 4:16 am

A child that suffers from overweight or obesity is one that should regarded as having a temporary disease, the obesity condition is dangerous for the child heath and has effect on his social life, self esteem and confidence. When you decide that you want to fight, and beat childhood obesity you should think carefully or a plan and a tactic you will use to fight this condition.

The three major keys in losing weight and having a successful diet plan are regular physical activity, performed on a set schedule and without exception the physical activity will encourage the child to get better and hopefully cause him or her to focus on activity rather than on food or the discomforts of the diet.

The next key to fighting childhood obesity is naturally a diet, making a diet plan should be done after advising with a diet professional that has all the tools and information about your child and his or her needs. making a realistic plan that will take a long time to complete you will gradually adapt new eating habits, showing the child that there are different kinds of foods and that making the child conscience of the things they eat and their effect on weight and the body. Increasing the awareness to the effect of different foods is a very important thing since it clearly identifies the cause and effect relationship to the child.

The last key for beating childhood obesity is as important and as natural as the first two, it is slowly and gradually changing the behavior of the child, and sometimes of the whole family, the new behavior patterns can be treated as rules first, make sure you explain why it is not good to eat candies, and more impotently you should make sure that your child knows that from time to time he or she are allowed to make an exception and have a candy, do not delete and block sweets from their lives completely since this usually has the opposite effect on kids.

The behavior change is a major one and if effects all the rest of the keys mentioned here, you should try and set rules in the beginning, if you can have a family meeting and set those rules it will be beneficial for everyone, making the children feel that they are setting these rules, you should encourage your kids to set rules and live by them, when you first start you can also join their activities to show them they are not alone, and from time to time you could explain how important it is to follow the rules and the benefits that are waiting in the end of the road.

A technique I have heard about some time ago uses imagination and positive thinking to encourage obese children to maintain a diet and physical activity routine. The parents have a weekly talk with the child and they go over all the last week events, good and bad, trying to explain what happened and why, not forgetting to compliment the child on his or her achievements. Once the events have been reviewed and points made clear the parent and the child close their eyes and imagine how it would be like in a month or two ahead, with more weight loss and better fitness and daily routine, talk about all the benefits of losing weight, like nicer clothes, better feeling, more energy, social admiration and so on, just make sure that the goals are realistic and can be achieved in a month or two of hard work, when your child achieves this you should mention the talk to him or her and demonstrate how belief and will power has real effect on life.

John Furnem specializes in work psychology and Stress disorders, he has written articles and held workshops/seminars on the effect of stress on children and adults . John writes articles on Childhood Obesity for ZupaTips.com

Tags: childhood obesity, obese child, childhood obesity help

March 30, 2008

Don’t Blame Me If I’m Fat!

Filed under: Obesity — admin @ 7:08 am

In a culture of blame-shifting we often look for someone to blame for our predicament. Being overweight is no different - who is to blame for obesity?

“It’s the fast food outlets - supplying us with fatty foods”

“Our thin-obsessed society is putting all sorts of pressure on even slightly overweight folks”

“The weight loss industry is to blame - after all if everyone was slim - they would go out of business”

Some will simply blame the overweight person - making generalizations and attaching unhelpful labels to the person. “After all” they say, “it’s up to us to manage what we eat and how much we exercise“.

There is truth in this, but it is too simplistic. Many overweight people have tried desperately to eat ‘properly’ to manage their weight - yet continue to struggle for years. There are a number of outside forces here that have more of an influence than we realise.

So Who Is To Blame?

The weight loss industry is large, with millions being spent every year by people looking for answers. Like any industry, it has it’s share of charlatans and snake-oil salesmen. Many manufacturers of diet pills and weight loss supplements are certainly opportunists - rather than looking to treat the source (i.e. by eating right), they are trying to treat the symptoms. However we have found that most decent commercial weight loss programs have a genuine interest in helping people manage their weight. So it’s unfair to cast blame on the entire ‘industry’.

If we were to start looking for culprits, we might want to cast our eye at the food processing industry - that, coupled with savvy marketing experts, has snared us into eating so many kinds of processed foods that going to the supermarket is like walking through a nutritional minefield.

Get Them While Their Young

The Center For Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) recently conducted a study of the magazine “National Geographic for Kids”. In 17 recent issues they found 51 ads for junk-foods - including a depiction of one meal that contained 590 calories (remember this is a magazine for children).

Many years ago a certain famous fast food outlet began calling its meals for children “Happy Meals” - creating an emotional response and attachment to certain foods - typically nutritionally poor foods.

Chemical Food and Clever Marketing

It’s not the weight loss industry that’s to blame - but the clever marketing tactics from the food processing giants that are misleading us. To make things worse - some popular weight loss diets have unfortunately associated themselves with snack food corporations, and severely reduced their credibility.

Is a low-carb / low-fat (take your pick) snack bar really that good for you? Take a look at the ingredients list - can you decipher all those numbers? Do you understand what a ‘partially hydrogenated oil” is?

What about those great ‘health’ bars for the kids - they even have the healthy tick on them (indicating they are recommended by the American Heart Association). On closer inspection those ‘healthy snacks‘ are nothing but lots of refined sugar, some white flour, trans fats, and a host of other chemicals. But hey - they’re low in fat so they must be good? Right?

Finding the Right Food

It’s a nightmare. What exactly is good for you? Who do you believe? Next time you see those bright colors, and eye-catching ads - do your own inspection of the ingredients list - you might be surprised.

Recently we bought some cranberry juice for our young daughter who had a slight urine infection - knowing that cranberry has some useful medicinal properties. Like any frazzled parent, having time to stand and stare at the nutrition panel while shopping with children is a rarity. That night our daughter had trouble getting to sleep, and woke up 3 or 4 times in the night. This is unusual for her.

On closer inspection of the so-called cranberry juice - we discovered that only 30% is actually cranberry, and the rest is water and ‘high fructose corn syrup‘ - a chemically altered sugar with a fair share of (anecdotally) noted poor health affects.

What Is The Answer?

If obesity had a simple cause, don’t you think we would have the answer by now? Good diet and exercise are the answer - but when we have large corporations spending millions to make us buy their food - it doesn’t seem so simple anymore. Go figure - profit in the food industry is made by either people buying more food, or sourcing/manufacturing basic ingredients at less cost. How does good nutrition factor in this? Are you starting to get the picture?

There is no miracle weight loss cure - no diet plan that will fit everyone. The only long term answer is understanding how your own body reacts to the foods you eat. Weight loss is not a 6 week program, but a lifelong commitment to good nutrition and lifestyle.

About The Author

www.freedieting.com is a resource for everything concerning losing weight. Independent reviews of popular diets, free diet plans, and articles taking a serious look at the causes and solution of weight problems.

This article is available for reprint in your ezine or website. No changes should be made, and all links left in tact. (c) 2004 www.FreeDieting.com All Rights Reserved

Tags: fat, obesity, diets, dieting, food, weigh, weight management

March 29, 2008

The Epidemic of Childhood Obesity

Filed under: Obesity — admin @ 6:25 am

Childhood obesity is becoming more and more common in the United States. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), over the past 30 years, the number of overweight children ages 6 to 11 years has more than doubled.

Obesity is defined as an excessive accumulation of body fat. Obesity is present when total body weight is more than 25 percent fat in boys and more than 32 percent fat in girls (Lohman, 1987).
I believe the most tragic part of this epidemic is that in most cases, it can be prevented.

Recently during a fitness and nutrition seminar at our church we went through an exercise that I call “fast forward.” You consider a bad habit that has been troubling you or even ruling your life. You look forward into the future to see what your life will look if you continue that bad habit in 1 year, 5 years, 10 years, etc.

I had one woman that was visibly upset. Rather than seeing herself she saw her children. She realized that her habits of unhealthy eating, were being passed on to her children and therefore creating the same hell she was going through. Yes, she was considerably overweight.

Maybe you already know it’s a problem but you don’t know what to do. Here are a few suggestions.

Eat meals as a family. I know that we are all so busy these days but sitting down as a family is so important. Slow down and share family time. Meals together aren’t just about eating. It’s also a time to spend quality time and share your day.

Do not love your children with food. Give your child a hug, a story, anything that encourages a relationship. Your child will remember a hug and time together far longer than a candy bar.

Eat a balanced meal. No fad diets! It’s really not that hard to put together a meal quickly. However, it does take some preparation. It’s pretty fast to throw together a bag of salad, rice in a bag (90 seconds) and broil chicken breast. That’s 20 minutes tops. It takes longer to drive to a fast food restaurant, order, eat your food and come home than to prepare a meal at home.

Plan school lunches and snacks. You will probably have to plan lunches for school if you want your children to have something healthy to eat. Little modifications make a big difference. Try some of these ideas; baby carrots rather than chips, fruit cups, turkey sandwiches cut in fun shapes on whole grain bread.

Incorporate exercise into their day. Do we even have physical education in the schools anymore? Get moving and keep moving as a family.

I hear so many people say that they don’t think it’s fair to deprive their children of candy, cookies and junk food. Really parents; the only thing you will be depriving them of is low self-esteem and Type II Diabetes.

Phyllis Ward in an author, online fitness coach and personal trainer. She consults with clients by phone or in person. For more information about Phyllis or her services please visit http://www.godstemple40.com.

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Tags: obesity, childhood, epidemic, childhood obesity, childhood epidemic

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