Introduction One of the most challenging community and public health issues facing the United States today is childhood obesity. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), in the past thirty years overweight children in the US have more than double in children and tripled in adolescents (“Childhood obesity facts”, 2013). The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) announced similar concerns and reported nearly one third of children and adolescents are overweight, and committed to an $8 million dollar commitment aimed at reversing this epidemic by 2015. The Healthy People 2020 objectives have shown convincing science supporting a healthy and nutritional diet lifestyle. These objectives are focusing on the health risk
The United States has an epidemic of childhood obesity. The statistics show that children in the U.S are becoming obese and this problem has grown throughout the years. Parents are usually concerned about protecting their children from the flu and the common cold. Even though they are doing well in protecting their children from such illnesses, they should also try to inform themselves about childhood obesity and the health problems that obesity can bring. Childhood obesity is an epidemic in the United States.
Childhood Obesity Kristy Unkel Walden University Childhood obesity is a serious chronic medical condition that affects millions of children in our country. It is a rapidly growing public health concern in the United States. As obese children grow into adulthood, their risk for health problems such as cancer, heart disease, diabetes and hypertension also grows (“Overweight and obesity”, n.d.). Obesity is a difficult disease to manage since obese children are “predisposed to obesity for the rest of their lives” (“Overweight and obesity”, n.d.). According to the surgeon general, in the year 2000, “the total annual cost of obesity and complications in the United States was $117 billion and more than 300,000 Americans died from illnesses related to obesity” (“Overweight and obesity”, n.d.).
[A Proposal for Childhood Obesity] [A Proposal for Childhood Obesity ] Natalie Caley [English 122] Childhood obesity and how we got there is the topic of interest. “Obesity is defined has having excess body fat (cdc.gov). And “over weight is defined as having excess body weight for a particular height from fat, muscle, bone, water or a combination of these factors.”(cdc.gov). Childhood obesity is on the rise it has more than tripled in last thirty years. Childhood has both long and short term effect on one’s body and mental wellbeing.
Temptations In Cyberspace: New Battlefields In Childhood Obesity. Health Affairs, 29(3), 425-429. Retrieved November 18, 2010, from ProQuest Health Management. Sothern, M, Almen, T, & Schumacher, H. (2001). Trim Kids.
Retrieved April 13, 2011, from http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH0001350 Web MD. (2011). Diabetes. Retrieved April 13, 2011, from
The economic cost of supporting and increasingly overweight population with more diseases is another concern (U.S. obesity). Childhood obesity has not only prominent immediate effects but dangerous long-terms effects on children’s health and wellbeing. The effected children can more likely to have risk factor, cardiovascular disease, such a high cholesterol and high blood pressure. In a population based sample of 5 to 17 years old, 70% of obese youth had one risk factor for cardiovascular disease. (Journal of Pediatrics,
9 Dec. 2013. Obesity prevention: Strategies to improve effectiveness and reduce harm. Bauer, Katherine W.; Haines, Jess; Neumark-Sztainer, Dianne Smolak, Linda (Ed); Thompson, J. Kevin (Ed), (2009). Body image, eating disorders, and obesity in youth: Assessment, prevention, and treatment. (2nd ed).
The World Health Organization (WHO), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and Health People 2020 have all addressed the problems of teen pregnancy and obesity in Middlesex County. However, only a few programs are available to help these teen women seek prenatal care and health advice. The goal of this health assessment is to make recommendations that are critical to the improvement of this community. Key Values Statement According to the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute (2012) situational analysis, research and data collection they have shown that the target population that is most likely to become pregnant is between the ages 15-19. These same women are prone to becoming obese because this same population has a lower income and education status.
(2004). Medically Managed Weight-Loss: Obesity Action Coalition, 232. Retrieved November 11, 2011, from www.obesityaction.org National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey . (2010, August 9). Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.