Chubby Kids...

That's great for your son. He seems to be in the rare 20%:

parents_size.jpg

Both of my children are normal weight as well, with Dh being overweight and myself being Obese. In fact DS4 is in the 5% of weight for his height.

Knowing that we are both bad eaters, DH and I enforce better habits for our children.
 
Deb, how long have you been a Ped?

Do you see more kids being overweight today than say 10 years ago? Do you agree that you are only seeing these kids with very overweight adults...not talking about those that have that extra 20 pounds on them? Or do you see....like I see in my area, a RISE in the number of overweight kids that belong to parents that aren't?

In the poorer section of my overall area (like when I go to the mall), I do see a good amount of heavy parent=heavy kids, but in my very well to do neighborhood, I see just the opposite. Of my friends, people I know, this is certainly the case. But then again, I would say 90% of the people here are thin, very active community. Where in the area "near the mall" in town, you would see a good 50/50 split on this issue, if not even leaner towards more obese than not.
 
Generally speaking, If one (child or adult) is fat or obese or just abit overweight...MOST of the time it is due to this:
1. too much eating
2. too little excersize
Of course, there are medical issues but no more than in the past where fewer people were overwight including kids.
The overwhelming majority of time, weight gain or loss is personal responsibility and habits.
 
Deb, how long have you been a Ped?

Do you see more kids being overweight today than say 10 years ago? Do you agree that you are only seeing these kids with very overweight adults...not talking about those that have that extra 20 pounds on them? Or do you see....like I see in my area, a RISE in the number of overweight kids that belong to parents that aren't?

In the poorer section of my overall area (like when I go to the mall), I do see a good amount of heavy parent=heavy kids, but in my very well to do neighborhood, I see just the opposite. Of my friends, people I know, this is certainly the case. But then again, I would say 90% of the people here are thin, very active community. Where in the area "near the mall" in town, you would see a good 50/50 split on this issue, if not even leaner towards more obese than not.

1. I've been in Peds over 20 years now.
2. Yes, in that time I've seen a startling increase in the number of overweight/obese children.
3. I would have to say that the majority of overweight kids I see also have overweight/obese parents - probably about 75% of the overweight kids. The other 25% have normal weight parents.
4. Yes, interestingly, the US is one of the very few countries where poverty is a risk factor for obesity. In any other country, if you are poor, you are starving. So what is different here? I attribute it to a lot of things, but mostly the overabundance of processed, high fat, high calorie, high sugar, high carb foods that we eat in excess. And right behind that, are the changing family dynamics and social structures as well as our irregular schedules and lifestyles, and of course, lack of excercise.
 

Of course I would report abuse to the authorities. What I'm saying is that you can't know a situation by looking at a person for a short time in a store. You can't look at the "chubby" kid and know that their parents are abusing them by giving them a diet of junk food and you can't look at the thin kid walking in a store and know what goes on in their home either. The OP edited her post after I started writing my post. She started off just talking about being infuriated at parents of chubby kids. Not morbidly obese kids.

You're right tw1nsmom, a quick look at a family walking through the mall is no way to tell if someone is treating their kids well or badly. But if you see an obese mom with a couple of obese kids in the grocery and a cartfull of junk...if it walks like a duck..

We are a very judgmental society. I think people are even harder, not just on others, but on themselves than ever before. We judge ourselves, we judge the family next door. It's a sad way to live when you think about it but the media and ourselves just keep it going.

And to the other posters who noted that wealthier folks tended to not be overweight - that is definately the case! At the large charity benefits I very rarely see anyone more than a few pounds overweight. And I don't know that I've ever seen anyone really obese in the wealthier parts of town or at functions where most folks have lots of money. What's up with that?? :confused3
 
They OP didn't say that she was enraged by obese people in general. She said that she was enraged to see an obese child walking through a store with their obese parent and a cart full of junk. The way I look at it is if you want to shorten your own life have at it, but you are suppose to do what is best for your kids. Making them obese because you (general you) are too selfish to make major changes in your eating habits is enraging! Yes, kids will want treats but you have to limit them or that is all they want. If they learn early on that an apple is a treat that they can have anytime they will eat the apple. My kids get candy at school parties and during the holidays. Most of the time after a month or so the leftover candy goes to my DH's office.

My mom is naturally skinny and I am not. DH and I built a house two years ago and I was at the house all the time. I didn't exercise enough and I ate too much McDonald's. I now have 20lbs. to loss because of my choices. My family is helping me with my weight loss. We eat healthier meals and I exercise 5 times a week. My kids ask me if I've exercised during the day. On the weekends we go for hikes that are an average of 3 miles. We are working on it together. My kids don't need to loss weight but it is never a bad thing to exercise or eat better.

I have two cousin who are obese and my aunt made them that way. My uncle has always been a big guy and both of my female cousins took after him. My aunt worked at a bakery and thought nothing about bring home boxes of donuts several times a week. She would laugh about how the girls could eat two dozen between them in one sitting! When my grandma saw that they were getting pretty overweight she tried to talk to my aunt about feeding them healthier foods and getting more exercise. My aunt said that she could only get them to eat junk food and they didn't like to run. Well they are both over twenty now and very obese. They both have health problems but continue to eat junk. I blame my aunt for never teaching them healthy eating habits. At this point I also blame my cousins for not wanting to learn how to be healthier.
 
And to the other posters who noted that wealthier folks tended to not be overweight - that is definately the case! At the large charity benefits I very rarely see anyone more than a few pounds overweight. And I don't know that I've ever seen anyone really obese in the wealthier parts of town or at functions where most folks have lots of money. What's up with that?? :confused3

Because cheap food is usually bad for you. Kraft Mac & Cheese, Top Ramen, Hamburger Helper, the dollar menu at any fast food place. Good whole grain bread costs a lot more than a loaf of fluffy, icky white bread. Fresh fruit and veggies are more expensive. Sometimes poorer people don't have a place to store or cook food, either. If you're buying cheap convenience food, you're going to be overweight even if you're poor.

I read an interesting book that talks about this--Nickeled and Dimed. The writer tried to survive on minimum wage jobs for a couple of months. The places she could afford to rent didn't have kitchens so she had to try to cook on a hot plate.
 
I have to add that I believe genetics plays a big role. My DS 12 eats an astonishing amount of food. It's like he's bottomless, yet he's thin as a rail. DD 11 is a light, picky eater, yet has a tendency to develop chub around her mid-section.
 
Both of my children are normal weight as well, with Dh being overweight and myself being Obese. In fact DS4 is in the 5% of weight for his height.

Knowing that we are both bad eaters, DH and I enforce better habits for our children.


I am similar. I am obese and so is DH. I was a chubby kid and hated it. I made myelf a promise that my kids would be average weights. My 2 adult sons grew up fine...once they are outta the house not much you can do about it. As kids they were normal weights. I do have to add..their sperm donor was not obese when we were together...I understand today he is HUGH!!

My youngest 2 DD12 and DS7 are normal size. I watch EVERYTHING that goes in their mouths when they are here. They eat healthy...their main beverage at home is water...soda is for outside and special times and vacations. I will make home made lemonade (yes..I use sugar not the sugar free chemicals). I have gut out all trans fats and high fructose corn syrup out of what I buy and bring into my home. They eat fruits..healthy snacks. Most of the cookies and treats I buy are organic. They are allowed 1 piece of candy a day as a snack..if that's what they choose when they come home from school. I make sure I have grapes and other fruit items they like. They know when I don't buy anything anymore why they can't have it. They are ok with that too. DD especially understands why... They canmake popcorn, have pretzels..nuts..pistachios...cashews. We do eat fast food out..but all is in moderation. They understand that!!

It really isn't difficult to do. I know make my own homade pizza. I do buy the shells. Much better than frozen with all the preservatives!! I will make home made mashed potatoes vs boxed. I do have to do alot of cooking..but we are all better off.

Just by watching what I eat...and still having the things I crave..but stopping when I know I am not longer hungry..and only eating when I am hungry..I have slowly and safely dropped 30 pounds!! I will fluctuate..but I am keeping it off.

I shake my head when I see my DN12, same age as DD, and see her size and I wonder what my SIL is thinking :confused3 . She has never been as heavy as me, and is alwyas on a diet..even had one of those surgeries..but still ate till she puked. She always puts it back on..so I have no idea how she let it happen?? Older DN had the same problem..but started losing it on her own. It's sad..it really is.

When my kids are still hungry after dinner..I tell them to eat a salad. Which they love!! :banana:
 
Because cheap food is usually bad for you. Kraft Mac & Cheese, Top Ramen, Hamburger Helper, the dollar menu at any fast food place. Good whole grain bread costs a lot more than a loaf of fluffy, icky white bread. Fresh fruit and veggies are more expensive. Sometimes poorer people don't have a place to store or cook food, either. If you're buying cheap convenience food, you're going to be overweight even if you're poor.

I read an interesting book that talks about this--Nickeled and Dimed. The writer tried to survive on minimum wage jobs for a couple of months. The places she could afford to rent didn't have kitchens so she had to try to cook on a hot plate.

This is so true! Every time I start to make a big change in my eating habits to lose weight, it costs us an arm and a leg! Anything healthy costs more.
 
Thank you Deb! I was reading through the responses, had my link to the CDC powerpoint all primed and. . .you'd already posted it!:thumbsup2 :worship:

There is something seriously wrong in this country today. I don't know the answer, but it is astonishing to me how fat, as a people, we've become. It really amazes me how many people think the BMI index is "off" because they've gotten so used to seeing overweight people they think that's normal. Normal weight is the new skinny. Overweight is the new normal. Obese is the new overweight and morbidly obese is the new obese.

I'm at a BMI of 24.5, give or take. I'm right at the high end of normal and I'm okay with that. I'm built like a sterotypical serving wench (36-24-38) with a pair of DD's attached to the top end. So that's fine. What I'm not is "skinny". But I get called "skinny" and "little" sometimes. (With blessings like these making my blouses strain at the button? :confused: )

I don't know the answer, I don't think we live much differently than we did 20-25 years ago, and yet look at how super fast our obesity rates have risen in that time.

Something is up, something besides just our eating habits, although that's the easy thing to blame. I don't know what, so far no answers have been put out for consumption that make sense to me.:confused3

For the record, I do Weight Watchers. I'm a Maintaining Liftime Member. And I'm off right now to go put in my 60 minutes on the elliptical while I watch The Next Doctor Dr. Who Confidential and some music videos. . .
 
Thank you Deb! I was reading through the responses, had my link to the CDC powerpoint all primed and. . .you'd already posted it!:thumbsup2 :worship:

There is something seriously wrong in this country today. I don't know the answer, but it is astonishing to me how fat, as a people, we've become. It really amazes me how many people think the BMI index is "off" because they've gotten so used to seeing overweight people they think that's normal. Normal weight is the new skinny. Overweight is the new normal. Obese is the new overweight and morbidly obese is the new obese.

I'm at a BMI of 24.5, give or take. I'm right at the high end of normal and I'm okay with that. I'm built like a sterotypical serving wench (36-24-38) with a pair of DD's attached to the top end. So that's fine. What I'm not is "skinny". But I get called "skinny" and "little" sometimes. (With blessings like these making my blouses strain at the button? :confused: )

I don't know the answer, I don't think we live much differently than we did 20-25 years ago, and yet look at how super fast our obesity rates have risen in that time.

Something is up, something besides just our eating habits, although that's the easy thing to blame. I don't know what, so far no answers have been put out for consumption that make sense to me.:confused3

For the record, I do Weight Watchers. I'm a Maintaining Liftime Member. And I'm off right now to go put in my 60 minutes on the elliptical while I watch The Next Doctor Dr. Who Confidential and some music videos. . .

I disagree with the bolded part. 20-25 years ago when kids came home from school, they went outside to play until supper time. Moms would have to call them in for supper. Now, they are either stuck in doing tons of homework, watching TV or playing video games. Some are inside because Mom just won't tell them to go out and play; some because its not safe to be outside without an adult.

My oldest is 26, my youngest 10. When my boys were little, they stayed outside all the time. They would be out playing football, softball, volleyball, riding bikes, playing "war", or whatever with other neighborhood boys. They got all their homework done at school and played outside all afternoon (when they didn't have ball practice). DD doesn't spend near the time outside and we no longer have many neighborhood kids. I have her ride her bike while I walk in the afternoons so she gets that outside activity. There is a big difference in the amount of exercise our kids get.

There is also a big difference in the way people eat. Just in the difference years with my kids; we (my family) eat out a lot more than we did before (and don't forget about those huge portions that are served). I realized the other day, there are homemade meals that I made all the time for my sons that I have never cooked for dd because we get take out or eat "quick fix" meals so much. This is something I am changing in my own family; eating more homemade meals and making them healthier.
 
Thank you Deb! I was reading through the responses, had my link to the CDC powerpoint all primed and. . .you'd already posted it!:thumbsup2 :worship:

There is something seriously wrong in this country today. I don't know the answer, but it is astonishing to me how fat, as a people, we've become. It really amazes me how many people think the BMI index is "off" because they've gotten so used to seeing overweight people they think that's normal. Normal weight is the new skinny. Overweight is the new normal. Obese is the new overweight and morbidly obese is the new obese.

I'm at a BMI of 24.5, give or take. I'm right at the high end of normal and I'm okay with that. I'm built like a sterotypical serving wench (36-24-38) with a pair of DD's attached to the top end. So that's fine. What I'm not is "skinny". But I get called "skinny" and "little" sometimes. (With blessings like these making my blouses strain at the button? :confused: )

I don't know the answer, I don't think we live much differently than we did 20-25 years ago, and yet look at how super fast our obesity rates have risen in that time.

Something is up, something besides just our eating habits, although that's the easy thing to blame. I don't know what, so far no answers have been put out for consumption that make sense to me.:confused3

For the record, I do Weight Watchers. I'm a Maintaining Liftime Member. And I'm off right now to go put in my 60 minutes on the elliptical while I watch The Next Doctor Dr. Who Confidential and some music videos. . .


I'm not surprised. Look at what we eat as a society, our food is horrible, portions are huge and it just keeps getting worse. Walk into any fast food place and look at the menu, they have burgers on there with 3 patties and bacon. If there wasn't demand for it, it wouldn't be there.
And nobody goes outside and does anything anymore. I remember growing up, kids outside everywhere riding their bikes playing kickball in the street. Its not like that anymore, life has become too easy. We have our cable, computers and video games and our quick easy bad for us food.

I'm not saying this is the reason for everyone's weight problems but it certainly doesn't help anyone, especially those with a genetic predisposition to being overweight.
 
Well how can you tell why someone is large?

I have a friend that has a chubby son. He is very big. He's 9.
He has a brain tumor. And is big because of his chemo. It happened so quickly. He was an average child and then - huge. Guess what though, we love that chubby boy. We thank God everyday that he is here in this world for another day-chubby or not. He's here.
 
I have read most of the posters. I am a chubby girl.
I have been overweight most of my life.
I was a chubby kid. I was a chubby teen. I was an obese adult.
In high school I suffered with anorexia & bulemia. Now my entire metabolism is screwed up.
I was taught good eating habits. We never really had convience foods. We hardly ever ate out. I did a lot in high school because I worked at Arctic Circle. But I have always struggled with my weight. My parents were both thin people. My grandma and a few aunts were heavy people.
I have 2 kids who are both very active in every sport we have.
the oldest is chubby but he is also 5'7" and 12 yo. & he is very active. On the swim team, defensive line on the football team, plays baseball, soccer, in general I keep him very active! the youngest is thin.
I have taught them good eating habits. I don't buy junk. I never fry food.
We eat out once a wk. With the exception of baseball season and then we eat a lot of Subway or something super fast, but rarely fried foods.
I guess what I am trying to say is that kids learn there eating habits from their parents. Often times it might be that they are just chubby because of health issues, sometimes its just because of poor eating habits. But its sad when parents enable the bad eating habits. If my kids had their way we would have kids, candy, ice cream & crap foods in our house all of the time but we don't. I buy baked chips if we have them. I rarely buy the other stuff.
I think we still have ice cream in our freezer from August and its still not been open.
But how hard is it to take a family walk? or go outside? I play soccer & baseball & football & all sorts of things outside with my kids.
 
I have a weight problem. My DD8 has a weight problem. From birth she was bigger than her twin. A pound bigger at birth. 10 pounds bigger by 1 yr. 20 pounds by 4. She remains 20 pounds bigger. They're given the same food. If anything, she eats more fruits and vegetables than he does. I've lost weight and we work hard to have healthy meals and snacks in the house. My kids are enrolled in Tae kwon Do, swimming and play outside. DD has recently been diagnosed with hypothyroidism and is beginning treatment.


But you know what? None of that is your business. You have no clue what kind of things are going on at another person's home. You have no idea what those parents are doing to help or hurt that child. Just as I don't know if your (presumably) thin child is nurtured and loved in your home, or degraded and abused. I don't know if you work hard to provide your child with educational opportunities or are guilty of educational neglect. I don't know if you're raising a cultured, open-minded individual or if you are raising (by example) a foul mouthed bigot.

Just because you see a fat kid doesn't mean you know the whole story. I can't look at your kid and automatically know what kind of parent you are either. It's none of my business and none of your business. Save your anger and pity please.

I love your post! I was a very skinny child and a very skinny adult (until I turned 40 ;) ). In fact, my teachers in elementary school used to give me their extra cookies, bread-and-butter, etc. because they knew or suspected I was not being fed properly at home. Judging people by their weight reminds me very much of the ECV threads on the Theme Parks board where people speculate and criticize people for using electric carts at Disney "when they are not really disabled."

You can NOT look at somebody and determine their health, ability, disabilities, etc. We are not clairvoyant! As another poster mentioned, she has a friend whose child has gained lots of weight because of treatment for a brain tumor. I've met numerous people who are weighty because of their heart disease, or skinny because they have cystic fibrosis and burn double the calories of a healthy person.

We need to all try not to judge people on the basis of the quick snapshot we see when we look at them.
 
As a Chubby adult that was a chubby kid, in my case i can guarantee it wasnt my parents fault. I am from a family of 4 kids, im the only chubby one. my parents are Fit, my brothers and sister are all fit. im the black sheep. I ate no different than the rest of my family. my parents were strict, there were very few snacks when we were kids, my dad was a military man and he would not have much junk food around. I just have the worlds S L O W E S T metabolism. I eat less food than both my brothers actually, they are pigs. they eat a whole pizza and are not the least bit fat. i have to constantly watch what i eat and yet im still chubby. it is my curse i suppose. my parents did their best to feed us good food, they didnt let us pork out. yet im still a porker !! haha
 
As a Chubby adult that was a chubby kid, in my case i can guarantee it wasnt my parents fault. I am from a family of 4 kids, im the only chubby one. my parents are Fit, my brothers and sister are all fit. im the black sheep. I ate no different than the rest of my family. my parents were strict, there were very few snacks when we were kids, my dad was a military man and he would not have much junk food around. I just have the worlds S L O W E S T metabolism. I eat less food than both my brothers actually, they are pigs. they eat a whole pizza and are not the least bit fat. i have to constantly watch what i eat and yet im still chubby. it is my curse i suppose. my parents did their best to feed us good food, they didnt let us pork out. yet im still a porker !! haha

You didn't happen to have a chubby milkman did you??;) No offense meant I swear, I'm really just joking, it's just that I'm the only redhead in my family and when people asked me where I got my red hair my mother told me to tell them I got it from the milkman. I took me years to figure out what I was REALLY saying...:scared1: Geez, you'd think my dad would've at least stopped me from saying it!!
 
The NHANES data is the best and most comprehensive statistics on this epidemic - and yes, it is indeed an epidemic. The trend is clear and indisputable:

childhood_overweight_preval.gif


This is also worth viewing. It is a slide show of the trend for increasing obesity in adults, from 1985 to 2007. Follow the colors in the legend below the map. It is very sobering:

http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpa/obesity/trend/maps/
And to further illustrate this issue, here is part of the problem. Portion sizes have increased significantly in the past several decades.

This gives an example of portion sizes in the 1950s vs today:

portions2.jpg


So although we may think we're eating "healthy foods", we also have to pay close attention to serving sizes, too.

Another article:

http://www.blueridgenow.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070422/NEWS/704220388/1020/FEATURES03

Portion distortion is growing problem

By Scott Parrott
Times-News Staff Writer
April 22, 2007

Portion distortion. Never heard the phrase? You're not alone. But you've seen it. Or maybe SEEN IT. It's one of the leading contributors to the epidemic of overweight and obesity in the United States, the North Carolina mountains included.

The simple definition: The portions of food diners consider one serving, in reality, equal two, three, four.
That's because the size of food Americans scarf down grew in recent decades.

The eight-ounce sodas of yesterday fizzed out, replaced by colas two, three, four times bigger.

The burgers adults ate when fast food restaurants first fired up the grills 50 years ago are now children's meals.

The list goes on, from chocolate bars to bagels.

Add less active lifestyles and more meals prepared and eaten outside the home, and you're reading a recipe for bad health.

Portion distortion carries weight beyond the belt, helping feed the string of health problems associated with obesity -- diabetes, heart attacks, strokes, cancer.

It even hits taxpayer wallets, hard.

"Bigger is not better," says Terri Wallace, the executive director of the Henderson County Partnership for Health.

But bigger it is.

Super Size

Portions are growing, from soda pop to pasta plates. The calorie count is following suit.

The Cornell University Food and Brand Lab traces portion distortion back to the 1970s, when the number of fast food restaurants boomed. The restaurant chains needed to set themselves apart to make money, so they adopted new strategies. Offering "value" to their customers -- more fries and cola for the money -- was one of these strategies, the lab says. After one fast-food chain took the step, the others followed.

The standard fast-food burger in the 1950s carried 200-plus calories squeezed into a single meat patty, topped by ketchup, mustard, onions and pickles, stuffed between two buns.

But those one-size-fits-all burgers are kiddy meals today.

Restaurants are now dishing out burgers loaded with nearly a full day's worth of calories, from Hardee's 2/3 Pound Double Bacon Cheese Thickburger (1,300 calories) to Ruby Tuesday's made-to-order Colossal Burger (1,943 calories).

Those figures, by the way, don't include the side of fries and soda pop, which have grown too.

But the jumbo trend is not just limited to fast food restaurants.

The phenomenon extended to the grocery aisles, the Cornell study showed. For example, one potato chip company made larger bags to provide a greater "value," and the competitors followed. Consumers bought the bigger bags, so the "value" size stuck around.

Bagels doubled in size. Chocolate bars did too. And the horror flick's not the only frightening thing at the cinema. Sweethearts shared 3-cup bags of popcorn and 174 calories when they went to the movies in the 1950s. Today, moviegoers munch 21-cup bags smothered in butter and loaded with 1,700 calories.

"Our portion sizes have just gotten bigger and bigger and bigger," says Amy McCall, a dietitian and nutritionist for the Henderson County Department of Public Health.

But they might not get any bigger.

The Cornell Lab says portion distortion has reached the limit. Package sizes can be only so big before they become too bulky to lift, pour and store. The same goes for fast food dishes.

As American culture changed portion sizes, the portions repaid the favor. A study found automobile manufacturers are now installing larger cup holders in cars and trucks, McCall says.

"Plates got bigger, cups got bigger, bowls got bigger," Wallace says.

Even the 1997 version of the Joy of Cooking, the staple of American kitchens, received a rewrite to accommodate the nation's growing appetite.

"Serves Four," may have rung true in 1975, but not anymore.

The cost for children

In the war on childhood obesity, Phyllis Jones stands on the front lines.

She's the cafeteria manager at Bruce Drysdale Elementary School, where 420 children and adults eat lunch each day.

One morning, Jones looks over two trays in the cafeteria.

The tray on her right holds two flapjacks, one sausage patty, diced fruit, hashbrowns, a scrambled egg and milk. Jones makes sure the children receive these proper portions when they pass through the line.

She avoids the portions on the left tray, the servings becoming more common. Double the flapjacks, double the eggs, double the sausage, double the fruit, triple the syrup, double the hashbrowns and a 16-ounce drink to wash it all down.

Adults often carry on the eating habits they pick up as children. So for two meals a day, Jones and cafeteria managers at the county's 21 public schools make sure students eat a healthy balance of food. Her favorite tip for parents: "Give them fruits and vegetables."

But she and the school system's Child Nutrition Department make sure children eat the correct portions, too.

They have good reason to be concerned.

Oversized portions, unbalanced meals, more time spent in front of the TV and less time exercising are causing the instances of childhood obesity to rise, with serious consequences.

Henderson County is no exception.

Nearly 19 percent of children between ages 2 and 20 are overweight here. Another 19 percent are at risk of becoming overweight, according to the North Carolina Nutrition and Physical Activity Surveillance System. Statewide, 17.4 percent of youths in the same age range are overweight.

Across the nation, children are coming down with illnesses once common among only adults, such as Type 2 diabetes.

The long-term consequences are grave.

"This is the first generation raised with a lower life expectancy than their parents," says Margaret McKinnish, a registered nurse and Project Coordinator for Fit Together in Henderson County.

So the public school system is trying to teach the children proper eating habits before they grow up.

The Child Nutrition Department, led by Christina Dodd, counts calories. Nutritionists ensure children receive the proper portion sizes, based on requirements established by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

"Teaching kids right is easier than changing adults," Dodd says, as she stands in the Bruce Drysdale cafeteria.

For a second year, Bruce Drysdale Elementary School is offering pupils free healthy snacks of fresh fruits and vegetables every day. The school received a $44,000 USDA grant for the program."I think if you make these types of things available to them, they will eat them," Dodd says.

As she speaks, four fifth graders prove the point. They race to the nearby salad bar and scoop up lettuce, carrots, tomatoes, broccoli and other veggies.

The cashier double-checks the trays to make sure they hold the proper portions and healthy balance, and the kids are off to eat.

Adults, take note.

Beyond the belt

More than half of the adults in the mountains are either overweight or obese, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control says.

Portion distortion is not the lone factor, but it plays a major role.

As portion sizes grew, so did the waistlines of Americans. The formula's simple: more calories plus less exercise equals weight gain. Only 41 percent of adults in the mountains get enough physical activity, the CDC says.

But good looks aren't the main concern -- health is.

Obesity opens the door to a range of serious ailments, boosting the risk factor for cancer, heart disease, arthritis. North Carolina's rates for overweight, obesity and related health problems are some of the highest in the nation, often exceeding national averages, according to Eat Smart, Move More North Carolina.

The results hit the taxpayer pocket book. In 2005, problems associated with obesity and being overweight cost $2.24 million in Medicaid in Henderson County.

Clearing portion distortion

The blame can't be placed squarely on the shoulders of food manufacturers and restaurants, Wallace says.

"We all need to take responsibility and control for our own health," she says.

The value meal may seem like a deal, but those extra fries and ounces of soda pop cost plenty down the road.

"It's not a value," Wallace says.

Taking the steps:

Terri Wallace, the executive director of the Henderson County Partnership for Health, recommends consumers take simple steps to avoid the health hazards of oversized portions.

“Those baby steps lead to a lot of steps,” she says. Among those steps:

• Think before you order.

“Before you go get the food, take a minute to think, ‘Am I really that hungry?’” says Amy McCall, a dietitian and nutritionist for the Henderson County Department of Public Health. Thinking ahead might make the difference between ordering the proper meal, or the “super sized” meal.

• Swap the big size for the smart size

• Save calories — eat a kid’s meal

• Order an appetizer as an entree

• Take home part of your meal.

• Drink water, milk

• Enjoy healthy options

“A lot of fast food restaurants are trying to offer healthy options,” McCall says. “McDonald’s has apple slices, Subway has apples or raisins, Wendy’s has mandarin oranges.”

• Start with a salad when eating at a buffet

• Eat slowly

• Double check serving sizes on labels.

Chain restaurants, both fast food and sit-down, often list nutritional information on the company Web sites.

Soda bottles, chip bags, and other packaged foods list the information on the label. It’s extra work performing all that math, but it can pay off in the long-run.

• Share a meal with a family member or friend

• Measure the correct portion sizes using common household goods.

For example, a 3-ounce piece of meat should be the same size as a deck of cards, or the palm of your hand.

• Order salad dressing on the side. Instead of pouring on the dressing, dip the fork into the dressing and then eat the salad.
 
I think that there is also a lot of denial when dealing with obesity. And portion size is definitely a culprit. Fruits and veggies are a great alternative to junk food, but it still has to be in moderation.

I, personally, think that it also has to do with the hormones in our milk and meat products. With all of the steroids and antibiotics that they put into those cows, I think it absolutely has an affect on humans who are consuming it.
 


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