Showing posts with label Policies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Policies. Show all posts

Tuesday, 9 June 2015

Overprotective parents harming kids' long-term health: report

Overprotective parents harming kids' long-term health: report
       This is a report card on  Physical Activity .   I wonder how  the food environment would  measure up  in a report card .  Let's expand our thinking to explore the food environment at hospitals, drugstores, child cenetered  community buildings  just to name a few . Tobacco  machines were removed  when legisaltion began to percalate in Canada.   Who are the forces  hinged onto Physical Activity ?   We can do better  and everyday we  sit and  simply blame  the obesity crisis onto the individual is a missed  opportunity to create  real change .    Paul Murphy 
      Health Canada just dolled out 4.5 Million Dollars on Weight Loss Research.  How bout some dollars on Prevention  ala  Tobacco Legislation in Canada.


     





http://www.participaction.com/report-card-2015/report-card/







Monday, 1 June 2015

Health Digest - May 2015- UCONN Rudd Center For Food Policy and Obesity

Health Digest - May 2015

Rudd Center Recent Publications

Views on Classifying Obesity as a Disease

In the first assessment of public opinion in the United States since the American Medical Association classified obesity as a disease in 2013, a study by the Rudd Center published May 13 in the journal Obesity found that a majority of Americans support the designation. "For decades, the message to the individual has been to eat less and exercise more, and for a number of reasons that has not been effective," said author Rebecca Puhl, Deputy Director of the Rudd Center. "Obesity is a much more complex issue, and the disease classification formally acknowledges this."

 
Rudd Center in the News
 
As food companies and restaurants increasingly remove artificial ingredients and GMOs from their offerings, "It's important that people still pay attention to things like portion size and calories even though the restaurant may have actually made some important changes," Rudd Center Director Marlene Schwartz said in a May 29 NBC News piece. 
 
The Rudd Center's March study on the increasing health hazard that energy drinks pose to young people was cited in a May 19 article in Digital Trends on how players of video games are being targeted for marketing by energy drink makers.

Rudd Center Deputy Director Rebecca Puhl's study assessing public opinion about the classification of obesity as a disease was highlighted in the May 13 edition of UConn Today. A May 14 commentary piece in Medscape by Dr. Puhl, "Obesity as a 'Disease' - What Americans Think, and Why That's Important," included a section on how her findings may inform relationships between healthcare providers and patients. She noted that many patients may not be aware that obesity is now considered a disease. "Healthcare providers may want to inform patients of the disease classification and discuss the implications that this has as a paradigm for diagnosis and treatment," Puhl wrote.

The May 11 edition of The New York Times quoted Rudd Center Director Marlene Schwartz about making sure you get enough volume of food when you eat at a restaurant to feel satisfied when you leave. The tip appeared in an article by writer Josh Barro called "How to Eat Healthy Meals at Restaurants."

Reuters ran a hard-hitting piece May 8 on a study showing that the vast majority of TV commercials during shows aimed at kids under age 12 are for unhealthy foods with too much added sugar, saturated fat or sodium. The ads don't meet proposed federal voluntary guidelines for the nutritional quality of foods advertised to children. Jennifer Harris, Rudd Center Director of Marketing Initiatives (who was not part of the study), told Reuters: "This paper is interesting because it shows that the industry's definition of what is healthy and should be marketed to kids is completely out of whack with the opinions of government experts."

New York Magazine published a provocative piece on May 4 called "Willpower (or Lack of It) Is the Wrong Way to Think About Weight." Writer Melissa Dahl quoted Rudd Center Deputy Director Rebecca Puhl and cited her recent multi-national findings that, when people believe the cause of obesity is lack of willpower, they express stronger weight bias, on average, than those who believe biological or environmental factors play major roles. "...I think the way to think about this is that obesity is a very complex puzzle and personal behavior is just one of those pieces," Puhl said in the article.
 
The Rudd Center was featured in UConn Magazine's Spring 2015 edition in an article on our work to reverse the obesity epidemic. The piece, "National Disaster," quotes Rudd Center Director Marlene Schwartz on putting research into action. "If all I'm doing is publishing in a journal, that's not helping anybody else." Deputy Director Rebecca Puhl talks about  challenging the assumption that obesity is a matter of personal choice. "That's a false assumption," she says, pointing out that the American Medical Association now classifies obesity as a disease.
 
Rudd Center Director Marlene Schwartz appeared May 4 on WNPR's radio program "Where We Live" to discuss "Is Fast Food Going Out of Style?" The wide-ranging interview touched on topics including why McDonald's is struggling, how Americans are eating out more often, and policy options like taxing unhealthy foods while providing incentives for healthy foods.
 
 

News to Chew On

 
What's Simmering with Our Friends
 
  • Voices for Healthy Kids and others shared information in a May 19 #SaludTues tweetchat about "How to get more healthy drinks in Latino communities." The weekly social media chats focus on a variety of Latino health topics. These chats are co-hosted by @SaludToday, the Latino health social media campaign and Twitter handle for the Institute for Health Promotion at the University of Texas Health Center at San Antonio, which directs Salud America! Salud America! is The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Research Network to Prevent Obesity Among Latino Children.
 
  • Following public pressure from the Center for Science in the Public Interest, MomsRising.org, and other advocacy groups, Dairy Queen became the latest major fast-food chain to remove soda and other sugary drinks from children's menus. McDonald's, Burger King and Wendy's had already made this change in response to pressure campaigns. The change at Dairy Queen franchises will take effect Sept. 1. "We hope chains like Applebee's and Chili's will choose to exercise the same kind of corporate responsibility that DQ has," said CSPI nutrition policy director Margo G. Wootan.
 
  • PreventObesity.net, a project of the American Heart Association dedicated to reversing the childhood obesity epidemic, highlighted a study published in JAMA Pediatrics that found that children have a tough time recognizing healthy foods in fast food television advertising. "Although leading fast food restaurants agreed to include healthy foods in their marketing targeted to kids back in 2009, marketers are often misleading in how they present those foods, researchers say." Only 10 percent of kids surveyed could positively identify apples in a Burger King ad - likely because the apples were sliced like french fries and placed in a french fries container, the PreventObesity.net piece noted.
 
 
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Tuesday, 19 May 2015

Can Mexico Fight Obesity ?



  If you want to see and witness legislative action to address Health and Health Equity just explore how Canada has  taken on Tobacco.  Despite countless reports and warnings Canada refuses to use Tobacco Tactics to address Diabetes and JunkFood consumption.  They have funded reasearch on weight Loss Surgery. Paul Murphy

Mexico2
This report originally aired on February 16, 2014.
MARTIN FLETCHER: Every Sunday in Mexico City tens of thousands answer their president’s challenge: to exercise one hour a day. Mexico’s health ministry says its citizens are too fat.
Yoga class along the city’s main Reforma Avenue. Nearby, Zumba. Five straight hours of Latin American dance and aerobics. All overseen by Horacio de la Vega, a Mexican pentathlete in two Olympics.
You see that 30 percent of people in Mexico are obese and 70percent  are overweight.
HORACIO DE LA VEGA, MEXICO CITY INSTITUTE OF SPORT: Yes.
MARTIN FLETCHER: And you’re an Olympic athlete. How do you feel about that?
HORACIO DE LA VEGA: It’s a very important problem. It’s sad that we actually came to this point. It’s painful, but it has a lot to do with education, with the culture, and we’re trying to make a lot of efforts to make this revert.
MARTIN FLETCHER: We met Diana Cardona at the Zumba dance. At barely five feet, this thirty year old mother has struggled with her weight her whole life. Zumba has helped her lose 20 pounds — she’s hoping to lose 20 more. The Zumba class is certainly hard to resist — a catchy part of what Mexico calls its three pillars to fight obesity.
So this is the pillar number one: more exercise for the people. I think I’ve lost a little bit of weight. Maybe.
After more sport comes number two: a healthier diet. But it’s pillar number three that has the whole world watching.
Taxation of junk food. With one and a half billion people overweight around the globe, Mexico’s battle of the bulge has become a test case in the fight against obesity. The new taxes are: eight per cent on food high in saturated fat, sugar and salt, like sweet breads and cakes. About nine per cent on sugary drinks like cola.
LUIS VIDEGARAY, SECRETARY OF FINANCE AND PUBLIC CREDIT, MEXICO: We’re doing a lot of education programs, health programs to change the habits of people, but we are also using incentives, and taxes can be powerful incentives. I’m an economist, so I believe in incentives, and I think this should have an effect on how people select what to drink and what to eat.
MARTIN FLETCHER: Commercials pound the message: exercise and eat healthy, every day, similar to the New York anti-obesity message of former Mayor Michael Bloomberg. And that’s no coincidence. Bloomberg’s philanthropic organization has pledged $10 million dollars to help finance Mexico’s anti-obesity campaign.
Jorge Romo, chief lawyer for Mexico’s beverage industry association, says that since the taxes were introduced January the first this year, consumption is already down five per cent — but he believes it will go up again.
JORGE ROMO, MEXICAN NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SOFT DRINKS AND CARBONATED WATER: We are not convinced that by putting a new tax for soft drinks, in addition to other taxes that they already pay, it’s going to be a solution. And the reason is that it’s an old customs — custom in Mexico to drink soft drinks.
MARTIN FLETCHER: But that’s exactly the point, isn’t it? To reduce the consumption of sugar because sugar leads to obesity.
JORGE ROMO: Yes, but if you taxed only the drinks which are bottled, then why not the other ones? There is an unequitable situation. And in talking of equity, that’s a main reason that the tax might be unconstitutional, because you cannot tax some product and the other ones not.
MARTIN FLETCHER: What Romo’s getting at: the new tax only levies extra pesos on bottled or canned soft drinks and packaged snacks, not the fatty foods and drinks sold on the street.
Still Mexicans drink more Coca Cola products per capita than anyone else in the world. Visiting a mobile health clinic, Maria Castillo has had hypertension for 23 years and diabetes for five.
How much Coca Cola do you drink every day?
For the family, three liters she says.
Three liters a day? Three liters of Coca Cola, so it’s one liter a day each person more or less?
She says, yes it’s bad. And tortilla and bread. That’s what makes us fat.
Mexico’s Coca Cola franchise declined our interview request. But industry lawyer Romo — who represents Coke among other brands — says the soft drink companies aren’t the only culprits in the obesity crisis.
But it’s the amount of sugar — there is so much sugar in these drinks.
JORGE ROMO: Maybe it is the amount of sugar, but if it is the only energy they consume, they eat or they drink, so no problem. And if they exercise no problem at all. It’s very expensive to buy fruit, to buy vegetables, so they only eating fried food.
MARTIN FLETCHER: With fifty percent of Mexicans living below the poverty line, cost is critical.
Doesn’t it just make it more expensive for the people who can’t afford to buy anything else?
LUIS VIDEGARAY, SECRETARY OF FINANCE AND PUBLIC CREDIT, MEXICO: But there are alternatives. The taxes — the taxes are only taxing high calorie foods and sugary drinks. There are other foods and other drinks available that are not being taxed, and we want exactly that shift in consumption patterns.
MARTIN FLETCHER: Perhaps easier said than done, especially in a country where even locals shy away from the tap water, often leaving bottled drinks as the only option.
Back at home, Diana from Zumba class has changed her eating habits over the past year. The children eat rice, tomatoes, peas, tortilla, and guacamole. A year ago it was fries, takeaway pizzas, hamburgers, cans of cola. If she hadn’t gone on the diet, she says, I’d be this big! And she feels better. Look at the badge behind her.
‘Me siento magnifico.’ That’s Spanish for ‘I feel magnificent.’
DIANA CARDONA: Whoo! Si! Yes!
MARTIN FLETCHER: It’s too early to say what the effect of taxation will be as a tool against obesity. Even its supporters say an increase of eight to ten percent is just not enough, but the government argues it’s the message that counts. Healthy eating saves lives.
In a local initiative by Mexico City, for those who don’t go to the gym, the gym comes to them. Three hundred so-called urban gyms were set up last year, three hundred more will be opened this year, and the same again next year.
With medical and psychological advice, and check-ups, all provided free by the city. Prevention, the mayor says, is cheaper than treatment.
Maria Gonzales is the city psychologist in charge of these urban gyms.
MARIA GONZALES, MEXICO CITY GOVERNMENT: We want the people to be healthy.
MARTIN FLETCHER: And when you see the people come to you, are they healthy?
MARIA GONZALES: Most of them no. But they come here and they start wanting to have a better way of living. A healthy life, a healthy style of living.
MARTIN FLETCHER: The biggest challenge is to start them young – all research shows that if a child is overweight at age five, most always will be. Esperanza and Citlali are five – they don’t know much about new taxes – but the government says higher taxes on junk food will make families buy less – and their children will be healthier, and live longer.

Monday, 4 May 2015

Dr Aseem Malhotra Calls For The UK To Focus On Real Foods Not Calories On 6 O' Clock News





Published on 18 Nov 2014

Follow Dr. Malhotra on Twitter @ https://twitter.com/DrAseemMalhotra

Find out more information on Action On Sugar @ http://www.ActionOnSugar.org
  • Dr Aseem Malhotra Says Stop Counting Calories & Start Eating Whole Foods On Breakfast TV

     

     

    Category

Thursday, 23 April 2015

Exercise is good … but it won't help you lose weight, say doctors

  Below are two links that deconstruct the myths related to physical activity and obesity. I, like many others , are working tirelessly to examine  the food environment and health equity. I believe we can do much better  with regard to creating a working plan , or platform, to address this complex multilayered issue.  As an overweight, obese individual I think we will need to conduct a transparent review on the diet and exercise model. 
http://web.archive.org/web/20150424074000/http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/early/2015/04/21/bjsports-2015-094911.full 
  Special Thanks to one of our readers for this .

"An obese person does not need to do one iota of exercise to lose weight, they just need to eat less

Dr Aseem Malhotra, Cardiologist"
 

http://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/apr/22/obesity-owes-more-to-bad-diet-than-lack-of-exercise-say-doctors


Exercise is good … but it won't help you lose weight, say doctors 

http://www.bbc.com/news/health-32417699 

 

Exercise 'not key to obesity fight'


 

Wednesday, 1 April 2015

Rudd Center Newsletter March 2015

Rudd Center in the News
 
  • Like tobacco, energy drinks such as Red Bull and Monster should be kept behind the counter with sales limited to adults, Jennifer Harris, UConn Rudd Center Director of Marketing Initiatives, told USA Today. The March 24 article featured our study showing that energy drinks are a growing public health threat to youth.
 
  • Keep the updated healthier school lunch standards intact: This was the rallying cry from U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and Secretary of Health and Human Services Sylvia Burwell in an opinion piece that also appeared in USA Today March 24. They cited the Rudd Center study showing students are eating more of the healthy food and throwing less food away since the new standards took effect. 
 
  • The Washington Post featured a high profile story on the Rudd Center’s study on parents’ beliefs about sugary drinks.  The findings help explain why so many provide them to their children. The March 11 article sheds light on how parents are still being misled by clever marketing.
 
  • USA Today published a hard-hitting piece on the Rudd Center study showing that many parents wrongly believe that some drinks with high amounts of added sugar are healthy options for their children. As writer Bruce Horovitz put it in the March 11 article, “Bamboozled by misleading product marketing and labeling, parents have failed to get the message that sugary drinks – beyond soda – are not healthy for kids.”
 
  • Obesity is harming the U.S. economy in surprising ways, according to a March 5 Bloomberg Business article. Among the experts quoted, Tatiana Andreyeva, the Rudd Center’s Director of Economic Initiatives, noted that obesity is correlated with an increase in absenteeism from work because of health issues.
 
  • The updated, healthier school lunch standards are a major part of First Lady Michelle Obama’s “Let’s Move” campaign to fight childhood obesity – a point noted in The New York Times March 4 article on the Rudd Center study that adds to evidence that the changes can succeed in helping students eat healthier.
 
  • Time magazine’s March 4 article on the Rudd Center study showing the new healthier school lunch standards are having the desired effects included key data: “students choosing fruit in the cafeteria increased from 54 percent to 66 percent. Children are also throwing away less food, with researchers noting that students ate 84 percent of their (healthier) entrees, up from 74 percent in 2012.”
 
  • ABC News carried a piece on a Puerto Rico proposal to fine parents of obese children, which Rudd Center Deputy Director Rebecca Puhl said is "unfair and inappropriately penalizes and stigmatizes parents. Much broader societal changes are required to effectively address the challenge, as "childhood obesity is a highly complex issue."

News to Chew On


 
What's Simmering with Our Friends
 
  • The Kids’ Safe and Healthful Foods Project, a collaborative initiative of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and The Pew Charitable Trusts, has published a handy guide for parents called How to Support Kids’ Nutrition in Your Child’s School. The guide includes a short video that explains how the updated standards are making school lunches healthier for our children.
     
 
  • Efforts by moms and dads to teach their kids about nutrition “are undermined when companies like Dr Pepper Snapple Group hawk empty calories to kids and use popular characters like the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles to do it,” says the Food Marketing Workgroup – a network of more than 200 organizations and experts dedicated to eliminating harmful food marketing. In March, the Workgroup asked Dr Pepper Snapple Group to adopt a strong policy to protect children from soda advertising.
 
  • The MomsRising Blog carried an article by the National WIC Association’s Public Policy Nutritionist, Martelle Esposito, alerting moms and mothers-to-be about a survey to help inform the association of existing gaps in knowledge regarding nutritional health and provide insights into where access to nutrition and breastfeeding services and support is lacking. 
 

 

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