Ho Hos, Twinkies: Can we be healthier than children today?

    Posted April 24th, 2009 by

    Twinkies, Ho Hos, and Fritos! Given how many times my friends and I ate these goodies growing up, it is truly shocking to learn that today children ages 6-11 are four times more likely to be obese than children were a generation ago. [1] Four! What’s going on!? Today, nearly one-third of all children are overweight or obese, placing them at heightened risk for heart disease, type 2 diabetes and many other serious diseases.

    We can turn this trend around. This is more than an issue of a Twinkie or two. Right now too many children aren’t getting the nutrition they need every day for a healthy future.

    Tell Congress to strengthen the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) so that more children in child care settings can benefit from nutritious meals and snacks.

    send a letter to Congress

    About CACFP: The Child and Adult Care Food Program helps child care centers, Head Start, Early Head Start, and after-school programs to offer nutritious meals and snacks to millions of children each day. Sometimes this is the main daily meal a child receives. One-fifth of our nation’s children live in poverty and these numbers are growing in this recession. This program provides reliable and regular nutrition to our children most in need. As more and more families lose jobs and homes, more children must rely on their child care and after-school programs to provide them with meals that meet nutritional standards.

    Right now Congress is discussing ways to reduce health care costs in America. One of the most important investments we can make to reduce the staggering costs of diseases associated with obesity is to ensure that all children get the nutrition they need now for a healthy future.

    Tell Congress to act now to provide nutritious food to our most vulnerable children and prevent lifelong health problems due to poor childhood nutrition.

    send a letter to Congress

    Please take a minute to forward this message on to friends and family so we can build pressure on Congress to take action now to protect the nutrition and health of children.

    Thanks for your support of all our nation’s children!

    Donna, Kristin, Joan, Sarah, Nanette, and the MomsRising Team

    [1] Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Statement Regarding Release of Estimates of Obesity Prevalence Among U.S. Children and Teens, read here, Beyond Health Care – New Directions to a Healthier America, Robert Wood Johnson Commission to Build a Healthier America, p. 7. read the report

    P.S. Thanks to our partners at the National Women’s Law Center, First Focus, NACCRRA, and First Five Years Fund.

    Posted Under: E: Excellent Childcare
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    5 Comments

    May 15, 2009 at 12:38 am by amy

    Thank you, Esmeralda and Janny, for maintaining that no instituttionis making our nation’s children obese. It starts with the family unit.

    Turn off the TV. Take a walk. Model good, healthy eating habits for your children. Put good foods in the cabinet/refrigerator. Help them make good choices.

    Your children are your responsibility, not anyone else’s. Step up and take care of your own.

    [Reply]

    May 8, 2009 at 1:12 pm by Esmeralda Guzman

    excellent point janny266. the other day i read an article on parenting about the school lunches and how bad they are. we need to stop blaming schools for this. school is really the only place were a child cannot snack between meals. and they burn off the calories by haveing recess right after lunch. the parents are the ones at fault. the healthier we try to make the school lunch programs the less our kids will eat it and will just be a waste.

    [Reply]

    May 7, 2009 at 2:43 pm by janny266

    I see your point, but I’m not sure it’s Congress’s fault that kids today are more obese. Speaking for myself, a steady stream of kids programming that serves up junk-food advertising, the easy reliance (and low cost) on fast food and the fear of letting my kid out of my sight contribute as well.

    Inexplicably, I have a skinny kid. Go figure.

    [Reply]

    May 6, 2009 at 3:50 pm by Nicole Mullen

    Children are not as active as we were. They don’t play any more. They sit in front of the TV and play video games or on the sofa listening to ipod’s or handheld devices. You must burn off more than you chew.

    [Reply]

    May 6, 2009 at 1:04 pm by MCmom

    While eating health food is of course- important- I think the even bigger issue for today’s kids as opposed to kids 20-30 years ago- is that they spend too much time watching TV, videos and on the computer – they don’t get enough activity. We were able to burn off some of those Twinkies and Ho ho’s running around the backyard and neighborhood-

    [Reply]

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