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| Published: Aug.27.2007 @ 11:56 pm
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Working Out with Kids: Do What YOU Like! When parents try to get their kids to be more active, these efforts usually start out full of enthusiasm and good intentions, but very often end up sidelined, not by the kids? Unwillingness to cooperate, but by the parents? Inability to provide the consistent support needed. Working Out with Kids: Do What YOU Like! Enlarge Image If that sounds familiar, don’t feel bad. It’s not a knock on your parenting. Busy, overloaded parents sometimes just get to the point where something’s got to give. Start with competing demands in a tight schedule, throw in the periodic unexpected happenstance, and the thing that? Gives? Can often end up being the kids? Physical activities.
The Centers for Disease Control conducted a longitudinal survey of kids aged 9 to 13 years, and included their parents. What the researchers found was that more than 60 percent of children aged 9 to 13 do not participate in any organized physical activity when they’re out of school hours, and almost a quarter of kids in that age group do not engage in any kind of free-time physical activity at all. Nothing. Not playing tag, not riding a bike, not even walking home from school. And 25 percent of parents said they believed their own lack of time was a major barrier to their childrens’ participation in physical activity. In truth, it’s probably even more than that, because it’s just hard to accept and admit that our packed family schedules may actually be interfering with our kids? Opportunities to play and be healthy.
But if the dog has to go to the vet at 4:00 and homework and dinner both have to be done before the teacher conference at 7:00, there’s probably not going to be much chance of your youngster working in a nice brisk bike ride, especially if you’ve also got to drop off the dry cleaning and pick up a prescription along the way.
But it’s not an insurmountable problem. It’s just that, as with anything you value, it helps to build in some defenses for the activities you want for your kids? Health and happiness.
Do what you like
While it seems logical and intuitive to get your child involved in something that interests them, you might also want to consider the importance of undertaking an activity that interests you.
Why is that? There are several reasons. Let’s take it from the most basic. Very often, heavy children have heavy parents and if you’ve also got a weight problem you want to tackle, consider that people are often more motivated to help their children than themselves. If you find something that you enjoy and then engage your child in your enthusiasm for the activity, it’s more likely you’ll both participate more often, whether it’s playing tennis or simply sharing a brisk, regular walk and a chat. Your joint participation makes the activity better for the family all around. Your consistency in keeping your child active will arise out of a genuine interest in the particular activity, rather than coming simply from the duty to pursue healthy activity. If it’s something you want to do, your leadership will help keep the child on track.
On the other hand, if you’ve invested a lot of your time and resources to have the kids participate in karate classes, but you end up just sitting and watching, you may enjoy vicarious satisfaction from your child’s participation, but it doesn’t as much for you personally. And many a parent is familiar with the antsy feeling of standing by dutifully waiting for a child’s activity to wrap up, preoccupied by other obligations nagging at our heels. The idle time spent as a spectator of an activity that’s not personally meaningful can begin to feel like wasted time for someone with a huge to-do list. But if you are a keen karate fanatic, even if you’re not participating yourself, your enthusiasm and attention to the activity will show, and will feed your child’s enthusiasm for his own involvement.
When we consider the things that give us joy, and expose our children to those activities, we end up sharing more than a workout.
Family health values
Perhaps the most reliable of defenses is a schedule. You probably have set times for your kids to do certain things. Wake-up is at 7. Bedtime is at 8:30. Piano lessons are at 3:30, but only on Tuesdays. Things that are important get put onto the schedule. Less important things get "worked in" whenever possible. Homework gets done right after school; chores after homework; if kids want to play video games or watch TV, that comes after the necessities are taken care of, right?
More than three quarters of kids get some physical activity in their unstructured ?free time.? But if you just slightly change the family’s perspective on those important activity times, and actually put it on your family’s schedule of essentials, you’re making a statement of values, sending a message to the whole family that physical health is important. A bike ride can still take its place behind other, more time- certain activities like homework, but it should certainly make it onto the schedule ahead of vegging out in front of the television. If it’s a scheduled segment of the day, we find it’s easier for kids to embrace regular activity as a fun responsibility rather than as just another option competing for some of their free time.
Group play
Small children naturally enjoy movement and physical play. In fact, it can be hard to contain their activity sometimes. Nearly 40 percent of kids aged 9 to 13 are involved in team or group activity, but studies show that by the time most American kids are 15, they’re no longer interested in starting sports. But if you’ve already built in a healthy habit, team activities provide excellent support for continuing that habit, because they come couched in their own little social structures of players and parents and other boosters who also appreciate the particular activity involved.
Parents are more likely to make sure a kid gets to practice or shows up for a class or game if the child is involved in a group activity, because we tend to be more accountable and consistent with group activities than independent ones, and the potential for pleasant social contacts offers additional enticement for both parents and kids alike. As with any group endeavor, sporting activity offers kids the opportunity to hone their work ethic, their team spirit, and their dependability. No one wants to let their peers down, so kids learn the importance of following through on their commitments, and parents can reinforce the notion for their kids that the responsibility isn’t only to their team-mates, but actually to their own well-being, too.
And of course, kids bonded through the camaraderie of team sports often form fast friendships, and no exercycle can offer that.
THROUGH THICK & THIN:
You have time for what you make time for. Scheduling your child’s activity time into the day doesn’t mean that it won’t get set aside sometimes anyway, but that sort of dismissal is less likely to happen if it’s on the regular agenda. If you don’t want the work-out to get left out, don’t leave it to just be "worked in."
Caroline J. Cederquist, M.D. is a board certified Family Physician and a board certified Bariatric Physicians (the medical specialty of weight management). She specializes in lifetime weight management at the Cederquist Medical Wellness Center, her Naples, FL private practice, you can also get more information about Dr Cederquist and her weight management plan by visiting www.DietToYourDoor.com
She is the author of Helping Your Overweight Child - A Family Guide, which is available at, DrCederquist.com, Amazon.com, or by calling toll-free 1-800-431-1579.
By Buzzle Staff and Agencies Published: 9/13/2005 |
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| Published: Aug.27.2007 @ 11:56 pm
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"Retainer Contact Lenses" Give Children 20/20 Vision Near-sighted children can now improve their vision using the same technique adults have used for years—hard contacts that gently reshape their corneas to eventually help them obtain perfect eyesight. "Retainer Contact Lenses" Give Children 20/20 Vision For decades, adults and teenagers have been wearing contact lenses to improve their vision. Most children or pre-teens have to rely on eyeglasses to help them see better, until they are able to handle contact lenses. Although a person eventually becomes accustomed to wearing them, the fact remains that glasses or contacts are a necessary annoyance, and many people would do anything to rid themselves of the burden. This fact has been proven by the remarkable increase in the frequency and availability of laser surgeries performed in the United States each year to correct vision.
However, there is a simpler, less invasive vision correction that many people have never heard of. The technique is generically referred to as orthokeratology, or ortho-K, and it involves the use of a rigid gas-permeable contact lens that works overnight to improve vision. A doctor takes a special picture of the eye to tailor-make a set of retainers customized for each patient to fit their eyes exactly. The contacts are similar to oral retainers for braces, in that they are worn at night while a person is sleeping. Some manufacturers of the lenses refer to the method as corneal refractive therapy. The rigid plastic of each contact lens works overnight to gently and safely reshape the front surface of the eyeball—the cornea—so that the wearer will have 20/20 vision during the day. The myopia that causes blurred vision is eventually fixed with the overnight wearing of the retainers, as long as the wearer continues to use them. Although the results have proved overwhelmingly successful for several years with adults, optometrists did not know until recently if the contacts would work as well for children.
The idea of using specially designed hard contacts to improve vision isn’t new. Some eye doctors have practiced it for decades with contacts worn daily. However, the procedure had limited appeal and wasn’t well known prior to its approval by the FDA for overnight wear. Now, with safer, more oxygen-permeable materials, the process has grown in safety, effectiveness, and popularity. Part of the reason the retainer lenses are becoming more and more popular for children is easy to understand; children often have very active lifestyles that can be hampered by glasses or contacts. Glasses get in the way of most physical sports such as football, gymnastics, wrestling, and basketball. Contact lenses can be problematic for pre-teen children to handle, and they can’t be worn by anyone while swimming.
While many adults do not have to wear eyeglasses until much later in life, children whose vision is impaired at a young age may have problems with their vision deteriorating as they grow older. However, researches have found that nearsightedness does not progress as rapidly in children who wear corneal refractive lenses. Children place their retainer lenses in at night before they sleep and remove them upon awakening. After a few weeks of wearing their lenses, they obtain clear vision throughout the day. The retainer lenses must be inserted nightly to maintain clarity.
Since it is a relatively new therapy, most insurance plans do not cover eye retainers. The average cost is $2,000.
By Buzzle Staff and Agencies Published: 3/9/2005 |
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| Published: Aug.27.2007 @ 11:56 pm
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Types of Child-Resistant, Senior-Friendly Drug Closure Systems - Part 2 Instead of relying on force to get the package open, closure designers can use certain qualities that seniors have but children do not, such as reading comprehension, the ability to follow a multistep process, and to a lesser extent, dexterity. In addition to Alcan Packaging’s injection-molded, single-piece closure, they have also developed a Slide-and-Tear closure. It is a cross between a standard unit-dose blister card with paperboard and a combination of various structural systems. This closure is practically un-tearable but can be opened in three easy steps. The package received the highest level of child resistance and a near-perfect score in the senior-friendly portion of the tests.
A similar design, the Slide Pack, was developed by Packaging Coordinators, Inc. It looks like a regular blister on a folded card, but the pills can’t be pushed out until the consumer moves a sliding mechanism within the package. Independent testing indicated that sliding is an activity that children can’t do but seniors can.
Dosepak designed a closure that features an inner blister sealed to an outer (tear resistant) paperboard carton that provides child resistance through a locking mechanism. Once the locking mechanism is released and the package is opened, the individual blisters are not difficult for seniors to open. Additional benefits to this packaging are the ample room the carton provides for compliance-related information, and the stay-attached paper-to-blister feature, which keeps the labeling in tact with the product.
The Envelope Package, designed by Algroup Wheaton Pharma, requires unfolding the package and pulling out a carton piece from the middle of it before the tablet can be pushed through. The closure also has the benefit of providing additional billboard for marketing and compliance purposes.
Other designs have been proposed, such as clean-cut blisters with units that can’t be peeled until separated from the blister. To avoid breaking and tearing of all the blisters upon one opening attempt, each cavity’s lidding is independent. Due to the concern of children using their teeth to open blister packages, No-Tear films require scissors for opening.
Another proposal is the Bitpak paper. It contains denatonium benzoate, a bitter substance that would be used as an overcoat to the blister package. The designers’ intent is that the taste would present an unpleasant experience and discourage the child from trying to bite another package.
The Break Tab has also been proposed. This requires the consumer to break the perforation in the blister, and then peel it open. It has been proposed for fragile tablets and other products where the peel-push action won’t work.
Yet another proposal has been the Peel-Peel-Push blister. The consumer must peel two layers before pushing the product through the foil.
The focus of these new concepts is on cognitive ability since many seniors do not have the dexterity or strength to open most conventional packages. However, the most frequent concern with blister packaging is heavier thickness material for bite resistance.
Many package designers work with drug companies to collaborate on new designs. However, the drug companies are reluctant to adopt the new designs in fear that replacing familiar closures with new ones will scare consumers away. Also, the drug companies aren’t willing to pay for these more expensive designs.
Many child-resistant, senior-friendly package closures are available to drug companies, and many more are designed each day. The challenge closure designers face is to design closures that meet the CPSC’s protocol requirements, is cost efficient and aesthetically pleasing, and is accepted by consumers.
However, even when closure designers are able to overcome these challenges, children may still be at risk of poisoning. As one closure designer pointed out, if the consumer doesn’t replace or close the closure, all the designs in the world won’t keep children safe. He stated that the most troublesome challenge is making closures so easy to use that the consumer won’t even think about leaving the cap off. By Stacey Lloyd Published: 12/12/2004 |
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| Published: Aug.27.2007 @ 11:55 pm
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Drug Closure Systems: Child-Resistant, Senior-Friendly Testing The most important issue with closures is security. Since it is the gateway to the product, manufacturers must counter the weaknesses in closures by developing tamper and child resistant features. When the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) revised its protocol requiring that drug packages be senior friendly as well as child resistant, package designers were faced with a challenge.
Since children between the ages of 18 to 24 months are most likely to ingest poisons, the Poison Prevention Packaging Act mandates the use of child-resistant packaging to protect children under the age of 5. The protocol requires children between the ages of 42 and 51 months be tested sequentially in panels of 50, up to 200 children.
The children are given empty bottles with closures and told to try to open them. They are then given a demonstration on opening packages and told they can use their teeth. They are given a total of 10 minutes to open packages. A minimum of four testers, with each tester conducting no more than 30% of the tests, is used in order to avoid testing bias. A minimum of five test sites are also used, with no more than 20% of the panel from one site. Eighty-five percent of the children must not be able to open the closures before the demonstration, and eighty percent of the children must not be able to open them after the demonstration (based on 200 children).
Seniors are also tested. The testing panel must consist of 100 seniors between the ages of 50 and 70 years old, with 25% of the group between the ages of 50 to 54 years, 25% 55 to 59 years, and 50% 60 to 70 years. Seventy percent of the group must be female. There is a minimum of three testers and a minimum of five sites. The testers first ensure that the seniors can read English, use any necessary eyewear, and understand the test. The seniors are then given 5 minutes to open and re-close the package, and then given 1 minute to do the same with an identical package. Ninety percent of the panel must be able to open and close the package correctly.
Even when effective closures are used, children may still be at risk of poisoning. If the consumer doesn’t replace or close the closure, all the designs in the world won’t keep children safe. The most troublesome challenge for closure designers is making closures so easy to use that consumers won’t even think about leaving the cap off. By Stacey Lloyd Published: 12/11/2004 |
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| Published: Aug.27.2007 @ 11:55 pm
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Pediatric Drug Studies: Children Are Not Little Adults Drug manufacturers are not sufficiently testing their drugs for pediatric safety and efficacy even when they know the drugs will or are already being prescribed to and used by children. More than half of the drugs approved every year that are likely to be prescribed to children are not adequately tested for use in children.
Vaccines and antibiotics are notably marketed with information for pediatric use, however many drugs, such as those for treating depression, epilepsy, severe pain, gastrointestinal problems, allergic reactions, and high blood pressure, do not contain any information for pediatric use. According to FDA estimates, more than half of the drugs approved every year that are likely to be used in children, are not adequately tested or labeled for treating children.
What’s the harm? Children have been harmed, and even killed, because of the lack of knowledge of how drugs might affect children. Children have immature organs and different metabolic and immune systems than that of adults. Therefore, children cannot be treated as little adults.
So, what is the FDA doing about this? The FDA finalized a rule in December 1998 requiring drug manufacturers to provide safety and efficacy information for pediatric use of their drugs, and provide labeling information on safe pediatric use. This is adequate for new drugs coming to market. However, drugs already on the market are exempt. The FDA can only require children’s studies in certain situations, such as when they believe that "significant risks" could be avoided.
The December 1998 rule expanded on a 1994 regulation that required drug manufacturers to look at existing data and determine if drug safety and efficacy in children could be supported. To avoid having to re-examine the safety and efficacy data, drug manufacturers just stated in their data that "safety and effectiveness has not been established for children". Yet some doctors continue to prescribe the drugs to children. And, it is legal for them to do so.
Is this all bad? No. There are some drugs, such as those for treating AIDS that may be beneficial to children even though they may not have been tested for safety and efficacy in children. Although the risks of prescribing the drugs are great, the alternative of not prescribing the drugs may be even greater. It places doctors in a tough situation.
What can you do to protect your child/children? Read the labeling and package inserts. Talk to your child’s doctor. There may be alternative treatments. Become an informed parent. Ask questions. Do your own research. Your children are depending on you to keep them safe! By Stacey Lloyd Published: 12/2/200 |
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| Published: Aug.27.2007 @ 11:55 pm
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Healthy Snacking For Kids Countless mothers down centuries have dreaded this decision…making snacks for their children, healthy, nutritious, fast and attractive has always been ONE BIG TASK. Here’s some help... It is never easy to run the fine balance between great taste, good health and visual appeal, more so if the customer is a child. Adults can be told about health benefits of certain foods, but a horde of hungry kids will not listen to this voice of wisdom. For them, health, calories, fiber and nutrition are the last considerations when they need to eat. So what’s to be done about teaching them healthy eating styles? The oft touted idiom that good habits should be formed early falls flat here, when is the early that is referred to? Teenage, pre- teens? How can you persuade an eight year old to eat a stick of celery when she would much rather have fries? Well, there is a way, make the stick of celery as attractive as a French (!) fry. A good way to do is to make an accompanying dip with low fat cheese, a dash of paprika and half a teaspoon of garlic flakes (or powder). Then even sticks of carrots, broccoli flowers, green beans, cucumbers, zucchini or mushroom slices can be downed without too much trouble. Convincing youngsters to eat fresh fruits may be an onerous task, but made into smoothies with low fat yoghurt, nuts and a combination of fruits will always go down well.
Fresh fruits also taste very good with dips that go with the fruit. For instance, a dip made by blending together cottage cheese, cinnamon powdered, and a tablespoon of skimmed milk is an excellent idea for accompanying a variety of sliced fruit – pears and apples, to name a few. A caramelized banana or a banana fritter will also make an excellent accompaniment to this dip. This specially if the dip is chilled for a while before serving, because then it tastes divine with hot and crisp caramelized banana fritters.
The power to take decisions is a very important part of growing up. Allowing the kids to choose what they want to have out of a list laid down by you will get you two pronged success, the kid eats well, and also feels he or she actually took the decision. A great recipe for his exercise in freedom of choice is layered delight. You can offer to have a tortilla, a slice of full grain bread, a khoboos (a Lebanese corn bread), or even a naan roti (from an Asian store). The next set of choices will be the spread on the base. It could be low fat cheese, low fat cream or plain olive oil drizzle. You could also offer mashed up cottage cheese or hung curd from low fat yoghurt (low fat yoghurt pressed by hanging up in a cloth to drain out all liquid – an excellent spread, tasty and very healthy). After this comes on a layer of fresh lettuce (sorry, no choice on this one), then the next choice is between a mixture of diced smoked chicken, shredded carrots and nuts combination, or a turkey mince with tossed green peas or beans with raisins combination to spread onto the bed of lettuce. The whole thing can then be rolled up into a kind of roll available everywhere in the Asian countries, making a whole meal out of a snack..full of choices. You can choose to name it, better still, let the youngster do the naming…and then come up with possibilities of filling combinations. But remember, no white bread base, fatty cheese or mayo spreading and no red meat or mince inside. Tortillas, cut into little triangles are very interesting for kids, and this interest is best encouraged because tortillas fill up the little tummy, satisfy an after-school appetite but do not weigh down the system, because they are easily digestible.
Tomato ketchup never fails to do the trick. You could use old slices of whole wheat bread for an interesting tomato stick snack. Cut the bread into about three quarters of an inch square fingers, brush with olive oil and tomato ketchup. Dust with a bit of oregano or basil and bake lightly, till crispy. These sticks can be refrigerated after cooling, and then popped into the microwave or even an ordinary over just before pangs-time.
For slightly elder children, Soya nuts are a very healthy alternative to greasy nut sacks. Roasted walnuts, soy nuts, raisins, dates, and almonds when roasted together, make an excellent little bowl to dip into without worrying about calories, fat and whatnot. Soy nuts, remember, are one of the healthiest food known to humankind.
For add excitement, try skewering together interesting combinations of fruits and cheeses. A good combination can be pineapple, chicken chunks and mozzarella, or try grapes, a cube of cheddar and apples. These can be skewered together on toothpicks or longer sticks…the possibilities are endless and so are the taste combinations.
The most important ingredient of a great snack is your imagination, creativity and the child’s involvement in preparation. It is a great idea to get the youngsters to decide what they want, but the options need to be well thought of…then any choice is great choice. But the bottom-line is – snack healthy, stay fit. Something every child should learn in the crib itself. By Kanika Goswami Published: 11/18/2004 |
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| Published: Aug.27.2007 @ 11:54 pm
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Spend more to save children from malaria, west urged Malaria, already responsible for at least a fifth of all deaths of children under five in Africa, will continue to increase its hold on the continent unless Britain and the US provide more effective, but more expensive, medicines, it was claimed yesterday.
Médecins sans Frontières, whose volunteer doctors run clinics in malarial areas, called on the Department for International Development and the US government agency USAid to stop their "go-slow" policy on malaria. This focuses on prevention of mosquito bites by means of bednets and treatment with traditional drugs.
"Donors must stop wasting their money funding drugs that don't work," MSF said in a report. It called on Britain and the US to help African countries to introduce combinations of drugs which include artemisinin, a treatment derived from a Chinese plant which has proved extremely effective in Asia.
MSF points out that the World Health Organisation has recommended that artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT) be introduced wherever resistance to the old drugs is high.
"Lack of political and financial support on the part of donors means that endemic countries are often encouraged to 'leave alone' failing malaria, and are not given financial and technical help to implement more effective strategies," the report says.
Resistance to chloroquine, once the drug of choice for malaria, is more than 90% in some parts of west Africa. Resistance to its replacement, sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine, is fast growing, particularly in east and southern Africa.
MSF made its plea for action as the WHO and Unicef launched a report on the malaria crisis. Deaths in west Africa remain high, according to the WHO, while "the number of children dying of malaria rose substantially in eastern and southern Africa during the first half of the past decade compared with the 1980s".
That did not mean efforts to combat malaria, through the WHO's Roll Back Malaria programme, had failed, it said - the situation might be substantially worse without them.
The WHO report noted that despite its recommendation, use of ACT "is constrained by high costs and limited operational experience in Africa. To date, four African countries have adopted ACT as first-line treatment."
There is greater use of bednets than ever before, but only 15% of young children sleep under them and just 2% of the nets are impregnated with insecticide.
Although the price of the treated nets has fallen, some African countries have failed to lift taxes on them. The campaigning organisation Massive Effort said yesterday that only 17 out of 43 countries that signed a declaration on malaria three years ago had fulfilled a promise to remove the tax.
The organisation also accuses the World Bank of failing to deliver on funding it promised to combat malaria. Since it undertook to provide up to $500m (£310m) in additional funds, it has been spending at the rate of just $44m a year, according to campaigners.
By Guardian Unlimited © Copyright Guardian Newspapers 2006 Published: 4/24/2003
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| Published: Aug.27.2007 @ 11:54 pm
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Fast food and Obesity in Children We all know what causes obesity, and that is eating too much of the wrong kinds of food and not getting enough exercise. Some studies have shown that fast food causes obesity in children. However, the fast food industry claims that their foods do not cause obesity in kids. So, is there a link between fast food and obesity in children? Fast food and Obesity in Children Well, there appears to be both a link between fast food and obesity and fast food and obesity in children. Some of these links are large serving sizes, low fiber content, and increased content of fat, sugar and salt in most fast foods. Also, since kids are usually out running and playing together, lack of exercise does not seem to be a link in most kids. Studies have also shown that there has been a dramatic increase of the number of times per day and per week that families eat out since the 1950's. Therefore, it is conceivable that fast food causes obesity.
Fast food and obesity-a link? The first step is to decide: is there a link between fast food and obesity at all? Yes, there are several things about fast food that contribute to obesity in children. First, there are the large serving sizes that are easy to note. In recent years most fast food restaurants have come out with "super-size" portions of burgers, fries. In addition there are "pizza by the slice" restaurants, where one slice is almost the size of a plate.
Studies on what children eat and where they get it have shown that children got anywhere from 29-38% of their food from fast food sources. This adds up to approximately 6 pounds a year. This taken out to its extreme: a child from age 5-15 can gain an amazing 60 pounds, and that is a lot for someone who for most of that time is less than 5foot tall and should only weigh 100lbs (at 5ft) or even less. This shows that fast food restaurants are responsible for at least some of the overweight kids in our society.
More than just obese kids The fast food industry does need to realize that there are other effects of fast food than just obesity. While anyone, but especially overweight children, are eating burgers, fries, pizza and coke products they are not getting the nutritious food that they need. Instead, they are getting empty calories. Calories, which have no nutritional value, are setting themselves up for diabetes, heart problems and other fatal disorders. This also leads to the stark realization that if this poor nutrition in our obese children.
Fast food in school Since the late 70's, schools have been offering fast food type meals in place of the regular school lunches. These schools report over 15,000 items sold each week, especially to those from higher income level families. In addition there are those teenagers that who work for the fast food restaurants and eat there at least one meal during their work schedule.
Advertising and obese children Advertising, including television ads, billboards, and other advertising, including toys in boxed meals, has had an effect upon children as never before. Children these days are growing up with low concern for their health and more concern for what tastes good.
Without enough parental supervision, these kids grow up with little nutritional discretion and usually these kids grow into adults with both weight and health problems as well as teaching another generation that it is ok to waste money on unhealthy foods. So it is not only the young people of our generation that are being affected by the fast food industry, it is going to have an effect for generations to come, if something isn’t done about the consumption of fast food.
It’s up to us! As is expected the fast food industry is not going to think it possible to suddenly change its direction after years of offering poor food choices. It will have to come from the consumer demanding healthier food choices. Our vote comes with where we shop and what we buy. Our children and grandchildren will grow up with weight and other health problems if they continue eating the fast food.
We can read all the studies that show links between fast food and obesity and fast food and obesity in children. We can look on as medical science proves that fast food causes obesity, but if we, as consumers do nothing and continue to feed these foods to our children, the health problems that will be the end result will be our own fault. By Jayashree Pakhare Published: 7/9/2007 |
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| Published: Aug.27.2007 @ 11:53 pm
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Getting The Right Wheelchair For Your Child Wheelchairs come in many different shapes and sizes and can be created to fit each individual user's particular needs. However, choosing a child's wheelchair can be somewhat more problematic, as you may need to take other things into consideration that an adult would not have to worry about. To choose a child wheelchair, keep the following tips in mind.
Assessing The Child's Specific Needs
Most importantly, when you buy a child wheelchair the specific needs of the individual child are of paramount significance. What is the child's health? Does he or she need a lot of physical support? Or, is he or she very active? Each of these considerations will impact what type of chair is needed and what elements you include in the chair you buy.
There are electric wheelchairs that are very sophisticated and can adjust the height, position and many other features, which your child can use in order to perform any activity of choice such as, writing or playing a favorite game. Other power wheelchairs come with a full remote control or joystick attached the wheelchairs hand stand, which will give your child full control of the wheelchair at all times.
Use Caution When Purchasing A Powerful Child Wheelchair
Of course, price is probably not of the most importance when you consider what type of wheelchair best suits your child. Of greater importance is the fact it meets your child's needs as fully as possible, while providing them the most mobility they can have. For children's wheelchairs, keep in mind that if you need to purchase a power wheelchair, the motor should be significantly powerful enough to carry the child through his or her day at adequate speeds to keep up with his or her peers, such as when they are playing or running, and without having to recharge the battery more than once per day. On the other hand, make sure your child can adequately and safely manage the wheelchair so as not to injure him or herself, or others. Just like any powered vehicle, an electric wheelchair is not a toy, and must be managed prudently to avoid injury.
You should note that today, many wheelchairs come with the ability to grow and adapt as your child does. For example, you can start out with a chair that has lower speed controls and exchange them for more powerful ones as your child grows and can handle a more powerful wheelchair.
The Purchase Of A Child Wheelchair
As with any medical device, wheelchairs aren't cheap, especially electric ones. Even manual chairs usually run approximately $2000, and electric ones are proportionately more expensive. However, if you're not able to afford one, there are programs and/or financing available to help you purchase one that best fits your child needs regardless of financial status.
Should you need assistance, contact a wheelchair manufacturer or retailer local to you. Although they may not be able to help you obtain financing for the chair themselves, they should be able to direct you to resources that can help you obtain the funding regardless of your actual ability to pay.
Visit us for more information on manual wheelchairs, pediatric power wheelchairs and get mobile power wheelchairs scooters.
By Christopher Smith Published: 6/25/2007 |
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| Published: Aug.27.2007 @ 11:52 pm
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Choosing a Hospital that Treats Childhood Cancer Facing the fight against childhood cancer is something that none of us ever want to experience. If you do find yourself in this situation, you want to make sure that you are choosing the best hospital to meet the needs of your child. By doing research and asking the appropriate questions, you can help give your child the best possible chance of fighting and beating this disease. Across the nation and around the world you will find hospitals that have oncology or cancer programs geared towards childhood cancer. Through research and trials, it is evident that the diagnosis and treatment of childhood cancer is different than treating the disease in adults. For this reason, it is imperative when seeking cancer care for your child that you do research and make sure that you are going to the hospital that is right for your child.
Some pediatric cancer programs might concentrate on one or two types of cancers and treatments whereas others, such as St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, treat all types of childhood cancers as well as doing research and clinical trials. Before you choose a hospital to treat your child’s disease, you need to make sure that you are going to a hospital that will give your child the best chance in the fight against cancer.
When researching children’s hospitals and oncology programs or cancer care, you should have a list of questions that are relevant to his/her cancer and ask each hospital the same questions for comparisons sake. Questions to include in your research are to ask about research, clinical trials, success rates, number of cancer patients they see each year, whether they have ever treated a child with your child’s type of cancer, which cancers they specialize in, if they offer support groups and do they offer family-centered care which allows families to be a part of the treatment plan.
Since pediatric cancer care is different than cancer treatments for adults, many families opt to go to a children’s hospital for care. However, this is a very personal choice. Whether you choose cancer care at your hometown hospital or choose to travel and stay at a larger hospital, make sure that you are getting the best possible care for them that you can. Since you are their voice and their advocate, you have to do what you can to make sure that you are giving them the best opportunity to fight and beat childhood cancer.
By Kathy Gupton Published: 6/19/2007 |
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