|
To Your Health:

To Your Health:
Promoting Healthy Weight in Texas
By Nancy DiMarco, Ph.D.
I know I told my readers that I would be covering herbs these next few columns,
but the topic of obesity has again become the most important health topic in
Texas and the United States.
A little over two and a half years ago, the Texas Department of Health received
a three-year grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to develop
a statewide nutrition and physical activity program with the express purpose
of prevention of obesity and related lifestyle diseases. The grant funds a taskforce
with members representing diverse health organizations and health professions
across Texas.
Two weeks ago, I attended a conference in San Antonio to unveil the Strategic
Plan for Obesity Prevention in Texas. William Klish, MD, a pediatrician at Baylor
College of Medicine in Houston, chaired the Taskforce.
The upshot of the San Antonio meeting to me concerned the dramatic increase
in obesity rates in Texas among Hispanic and African-American children and the
corresponding increases in Type 2, or non-insulin dependent, diabetes.
Currently 20 percent of all children in the state are considered obese. Five
percent of these children are already developing symptoms of diabetes -- something
rarely seen two decades ago.
If diabetes is developed before age 15, these children can expect to have their
life span decreased by 27 years. If the child develops the disease between 15
and 19 years of age, the reduction is 23 years. Dr. Klish stated that he has
witnessed sudden death due to obesity in children as young as 6 years of age.
"If nothing is done to stop this epidemic of obesity, children of this
generation, on average, are unlikely to live as long as their parents,"
Dr Klish said.
This is the first time since health statistics have been kept that this phenomena
could happen.
Let’s review some facts.
Among Texas adults, 61 percent are overweight or obese. Even though the American
public realizes that there is an increase in the number of individuals considered
to be overweight or obese, a national survey conducted by the American Heart
Association in 2000 found that only 28 percent of adults correctly identified
obesity as a risk factor associated with heart disease and heart attacks.
In addition, in 2002, The American Institute for Cancer Research conducted a
poll of 1,025 people and showed that only 25 percent of them knew about the
link between obesity and cancer.
Judith Stern, one of the nation’s leading researchers on obesity, reported
at the American Obesity Association in 2000 that among 1,000 parents surveyed,
only 5 percent correctly identified obesity as the greatest long-term threat
to the health of their children. However, 30 percent of those surveyed were
concerned about their children’s weight.
The Strategic Plan for Obesity Prevention in Texas is non-specific to allow
individual agencies to implement the objectives in a manner that fits the needs
of distinctive communities. We learned that what works best in El Paso might
not work in rural Denton County.
However, the vision, mission, goals and objectives of the Strategic Plan are
straightforward and simple:
1 Vision: All Texans have a healthy weight through physical activity and healthful
eating.
2 Mission: To reduce the burden of weight-related disease by decreasing the
prevalence of obesity.
3 Goal 1: Increase awareness of obesity as a public health issue that impacts
the quality of life of families.
- Objective 1: Identify, develop and disseminate messages and materials regarding
obesity and its impact on quality of life.
4 Goal 2: Mobilize families, schools and communities to create opportunities
to choose lifestyles that promote healthy weight.
- Objective 1: Identify and evaluate existing plans and activities that promote
healthful eating and physical activity.
- Objective 2: Develop, implement and evaluate new plans and activities that
promote healthful eating habits and physical activity.
5 Goals 3: Promote policies and environmental changes that support healthful
eating habits and physical activity.
- Objective 1: Increase advocacy for initiatives and policies that support
healthful eating habits and physical activity.
6 Goal 4: Monitor obesity rates and related behaviors and health conditions
for planning, evaluation and dissemination activities.
- Objective 1: Create a system for data collection, monitoring and reporting
activities.
- Objective 2: Implement data-management systems that assure quality and
consistent data.
So there you have it. Very worthy goals and objectives to turn this tide.
Dr. Nancy DiMarco is a research professor in the Department
of Nutrition and Food Sciences, the nutrition coordinator for the
Institute for Women's Health and coordinator of the master's
program in Exercise and Sports Nutrition at Texas Woman's
University. She can be reached at ndimarco@twu.edu.
For Further Information Contact:
Roy Kron
Director of News and Information
Tel: (940) 898-3456
e-mail: rkron@twu.edu
|