Healthcare

The secret weapon to ending America’s health crisis — schools

America has a big, fat problem. A whopping 13 million American children are obese  — and millions more are about to join their ranks. By 2025, according to a report in Pediatric Obesity, the nation will house 17 million obese kids.  

This is alarming. Obesity can lead to a slew of dangerous health complications, like diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease. And it imposes immense costs on the nation’s healthcare system.

{mosads}To save lives and trim budgets, parents and policymakers alike need to make sure kids learn about health habits early.

Unsurprisingly, the biggest culprit in childhood obesity is diet. Only eight in 100 children eat the recommended amount of fruit. Fewer than two in 100 eat enough vegetables.

Young Americans wolf down a lot of junk food, though. One in three kids eats fast food every single day.  One in four high schoolers drinks soda daily.

Access to healthy foods isn’t the issue; it’s that kids just aren’t making healthy choices. One study of 6- to 8-year-old public schools students in New York City found that while six in 10 kids put a vegetable on their cafeteria trays, just one in four of those actually dared eat a bite.

Kids also aren’t getting enough physical activity. Right now, less than half of young Americans get the hour of daily exercise recommended by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Insufficient exercise coupled with poor food choices is a recipe for disaster. The overwhelming majority of obese children — 80 percent — don’t shed weight as adults, so are destined for a lifetime of obesity.  

That’s devastating for health, obviously, but also for our healthcare system. Obesity costs the United States $210 billion each year.  Many chronic diseases stem from obesity — and chronic disease is expected to cost the nation $42 trillion between now and 2030. Chronic disease is the top driver of rising healthcare costs.

Schools are uniquely situated to whip kids into shape. Children spend most days at school — and typically have at least one meal there. So teachers and administrators could provide students with the resources to stay healthy. But most haven’t.

Only four in 10 high schools — and just two in 10 middle schools — require students to learn about nutrition.  Physical education is vanishing, too. More than 20 percent of schools have removed physical education requirements — and fewer than one in 10 offer daily gym classes.

Better prioritizing nutrition and providing more opportunities for exercise could dramatically improve America’s health — and help trim the nation’s healthcare costs.

Consider one study in which low-income children participated in a nutrition course that coupled fun activities with classroom instruction and take-home guides. During the program, participants ate more fruits and vegetables and made healthier food choices, like opting for low-fat or fat-free milk.

Another study found that adding an hour of gym class for students in kindergarten through fifth graded reduced Body Mass Index by half a point, on average.

Some schools are embracing creative ways to keep students healthy.

At Pulsaki Elementary School in Delaware, for instance, each student receives a fruit or vegetable to eat during snack time. They also can participate in a walking club and receive fun tokens to decorate their backpacks based on the number of minutes they’ve walked.  

At Chateau Estates School in Louisiana, children learn about “go” foods like vegetables and fruits, “slow” like cheesy broccoli, which are partially healthy and should be eaten in moderation and, “whoa” foods that should be avoided.  

The First Lady also has inspired schools to help kids eat better and exercise more. Thanks to a national initiative called Let’s Move!, many schools now work with local chefs to ensure that meals are healthy and tasty.  More than 20,000 schools also have committed to integrating 60 minutes of physical activity into their student’s daily schedule.

Implementing and participating in initiatives like these can help students get healthy — and stay healthy throughout their lives. That’ll drastically help these children — and save our healthcare system big.

Kenneth Thorpe is professor of health policy at Emory University and chairman of the Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease.


 

The views expressed by contributors are their own and not the views of The Hill.