The Power Of The Family Dinner To Combat Childhood Obesity

Michelle Obama and many public health advocates, the necessary attention was devoted to the epidemic of obesity in America. Many possible interventions have been raised, including healthy school meal programs, more opportunities for play and recreation, and less consumption of processed, poor quality food.

The stars make team with Mehmet Oz TV doctor for the costs of the garden Gala, which aims to raise funds to help launch a new program of HealthCorps schools across the country.

Dr. David Katz, the new editor of the journal of the obesitysupported recently on this site that families (parents and children together) are being forgotten in the distant efforts to stop the trend of obesity in U.S. children. We are in agreement. Programs target primarily to schools and adults occasionally, but rarely we treat the social unit of the family of any consideration. What an oversight! Family dinner is a positive activity that is immediately understandable to parents and immediately exploitable. It is something that the vast majority of parents can do without a lot more than some basic ingredients and a table in the kitchen.

Regular, routine meals add structure to the day of the child (and a parent) and this structure arises a myriad of health and social benefits, including the best relationships with peers and adults, the best notes in schools and reducing the risk of the use of drugs, alcohol or cigarettes. We all know this. But the children (and adults) who have regular meals, with the television off and the conversation is enabled, are also far less likely to be overweight, are less likely to have eating disorders and are more likely to eat more fruits and vegetables than those who eat only or on the run.

Many people, it seems illogical – simply because the parents and children eat together does not mean eating healthy foods, say. Could not the families eat together and still just eat junk? Yes, of course, but empirical evidence and common sense, shows that this is not the case. Many studies have shown that families making lunch at home eat indeed healthier. A theory is that once the parents go to collectively step shop, prepare and serve meals, they begin also to make the best choices for themselves and their families. The Act to sit at the table and putting emphasis on the time of the meal may suddenly, take the meal “Fast” much less interesting and less acceptable as an option every day.

Family dinner is not always easy to achieve, night after night, but the benefits to families and society are worth the effort. Parents could certainly benefit from the improvement of nutritional package, the social and tax policies that support healthy food purchasing and more flexible workplace policies to enable parents to go home by dinner time. But we should spend at least some of our research efforts to find how to better support parents in making healthy food choices and how to help strengthen the skills required to achieve family dinner.

The line of the bottom is dinner makes a difference. Family dinner is our best result in an immediate impact on obesity in children. We should not shy to be a proven, no matter how old-fashioned or simplistic, it seems. Lunch and childhood obesity family must be in the same sentence and families should be part of our anti-obesity efforts.

Photo of diet and fitness

Photo of diet and fitness

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One Response to “The Power Of The Family Dinner To Combat Childhood Obesity”

  1. admin says:

    What an event! When I arrived at the wedding (which was magnificent elsewhere), I could not find someone – everyone was black.

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