Walker 1 Ashley Walker Professor...
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Ashley Walker
Professor Avalos
English 102
2 December 2003
Preventing Obesity in Children
Americans are the fattest people on the planet and continue to expand. According to
a survey of adult men and women in the United States during 1999-2000, published in
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 30.5% of Americans are
obese, up from 22.9% ten years earlier, and nearly two-thirds (64.5%) are overweight
(Flegal et al.). Excess weight isn’t just a matter of looks. Obesity magnifies the risk of
heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, and other ailments–already overtaking
tobacco as the leading cause of chronic illness (Brownell and Horgen 4). An especially
disturbing aspect of this trend is that children are increasingly obese. The Center for
Disease Control and Prevention reports that the percentage of obese children aged 6 to 11
almost quadrupled from 4% in 1974 to 15% in 2000, and the percentage of obese children
aged 12 to 19 increased from 6% in 1974 to 15% in 2000 (United States; see Fig. 1).
Obese children have a 70% chance of becoming obese adults with a much higher risk of
serious illness than those of normal weight (Brownell and Horgen 46). Furthermore,
obese children suffer many serious health problems today. Pediatricians now routinely
treat atherosclerosis and type II diabetes, diseases that used to be frequent only among
older people (Tyre 38). Today’s children are among the first generation in American
history who may die at earlier ages than their parents.
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Fig. 1. Prevalence of overweight among children and adolescents ages 6-19 years,
chart from United States, Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Prevalence of Overweight Among Children and Adolescents:
United States, 1999-2000 (24 Oct. 2002. <http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/
pubs/pubd/hestats/overwght99.htm>).
For most people in the United States, obesity is a matter of individual choice and
old-fashioned will power (Lee and Oliver). The usual advice for overweight people is to
eat less and exercise more, but how applicable is this advice for children unless they have
strong guidance from adults? How can children make intelligent choices about eating in
an environment where overeating is normal and where few adults know what’s in the
food they eat? The United States has been successful in addressing teenage health
problems: drug use has dropped, teenage pregnancy has been reduced, and teen smoking
has declined. We need to take a similar proactive response by taking concrete steps to
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reverse the trend toward more obese children.
Many have blamed the rise in obesity on a more sedentary life style, including the
move to the suburbs, where people drive instead of walk, and increased viewing of
television. One study of children watching television found a significant drop in the
average metabolic rate during viewing (Klesges, Shelton, and Klesges). Another study
reports that reducing children’s television viewing also affects their eating behavior
(Robinson and Killen). No doubt that children who exercise less tend to weigh more, but
the couch potato argument does not explain why the enormous weight gains have
occurred over the past twenty-five years. The move to the suburbs and the widespread
viewing of television began in the 1950s. Furthermore, the couch potato argument
neglects the extraordinary rise of female participation in athletics. The number of young
women playing a sport in high school has risen from 294,015 in 1971-72 to 2,856,358 in
2002-03, almost a ten-fold increase (“Participation”). Yet girls, like boys, have gained
weight.
The simple answer to why Americans of all ages have steadily gained weight over
the past three decades is that we’re consuming more calories—about 500 more per person
per day in 2000 than in 1984. Marion Nestle, the chair of the Department of Nutrition and
Food Studies at New York University, observes that “food is so overproduced in the U.S.
that there are 3,800 calories per person per day, and we only need about half of that" (qtd.
in Spake and Marcus 43). We’re eating more food high in calories and high in fat than
ever before.
Patterns of eating in America have changed over the past three decades. With more
people working longer hours and fewer staying at home, annual spending in adjusted
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dollars at restaurants increased nearly by a factor of ten between 1970 and 2003, from
$42.8 billion to $426.1 billion (“Industry”). The growth was most rapid among fast-food
chains, which by 1999 were opening a new restaurant every two hours (Schlosser,
“Bitter”). According to Eric Schlosser,
In 1970, Americans spent about $6 billion on fast food; in 2001, they spent more
than $110 billion. Americans now spend more money on fast food than on higher
education, personal computers, computer software, or new cars. They spend more
money on fast food than on movies, books, magazines, newspapers, videos, and
recorded music–combined. (Fast 3)
As the restaurant business became more competitive, fast-food chains realized that the
cost of the food they served was small in comparison to the costs of buildings, labor,
packaging, and advertising, so they began increasing the size of portions. Amanda Spake
and Mary Brophy Marcus note: “When McDonald's opened, its original burger, fries, and
12-ounce Coke provided 590 calories. Today, a supersize Extra Value Meal with a
Quarter Pounder With Cheese, supersize fries, and a supersize drink is 1,550 calories”
(44). Large portions may represent good value for the dollar, but they are not good value
for overall health.
Another significant change in the American diet beginning in the 1970s has been
the introduction of high-fructose corn syrup into many foods. Look at food labels today,
and you will find fructose, dextrose, maltrose, or a similar name—all corn syrup
products—high on the list of ingredients in foods like peanut butter, crackers, and
ketchup that you might not expect to contain such high levels of sugar. Food producers
found that sweetness is an important component of taste, and they have been dumping in
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sweet corn syrup ever since. High-fructose corn syrup is cheap to produce and enjoys
government subsidies, enabling soft drink manufacturers to increase size without
increasing cost. The 8-ounce soft drink bottle of the 1950s has been replaced with the 12-
ounce can, 20-ounce bottle, or 32-ounce fountain drink. Harvard researcher David
Ludwig has found that food high in sugar makes you hungrier in a short time because it
creates a spike in blood sugar followed by a crash, triggering overeating (Uhlenhuth). In
other words, one cookie does lead to another.
Also contributing to the rise of obesity is widespread availability of food. Stores
that formerly did not sell food such as drug stores now have aisles of food. Gas stations
have been replaced by mini-marts. Vending machines are found nearly everywhere,
particularly in cash-strapped schools. And food companies have produced an endless line
of good-tasting snack foods for consumption at home and at work. When we eat food
high in sugar and feel hungry two hours later, usually food is close by.
These factors have contributed to a general rise in obesity, but they do not explain
why the rate of obesity among children has skyrocketed. One prominent cause is the huge
increase in marketing food to children, which has not only doubled since 1992 but also
become increasingly sophisticated. An average child in the United States who watches
television now sees a food ad on Saturday morning every 5 minutes and a total of over
10,000 a year, overwhelmingly ads for high-sugar and high-fat food (Brownell and
Horgen 101-02). Restaurant and food companies spend fifteen billion dollars in
marketing to children each year with sophisticated advertising campaigns that include
product tie-ins (Barboza C1). Even children of parents who limit or ban television
watching are exposed to a massive amount of food advertising in movies, video games,
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the Internet, and even in schools. Walter Willett, a Harvard professor of nutrition,
observes “The vast majority of what [food companies] sell is junk. . . . How often do you
see fruits and vegetables marketed?” (qtd. in Barboza C1).
Obesity in children is a health crisis comparable to the illnesses causes by
smoking. Defenders of the food industry argue that smoking is voluntary, but everyone
has to eat. The crisis for children is more analogous to second-hand smoke, which has
been proven to be harmful to children. To blame children for choosing to be fat is like
blaming a baby to be born to parents who smoke. Most children lack knowledge to make
intelligent food choices, and they often have no access to healthy food. Parents of course
can make a difference, but parents do not control much of the environment where
children eat, including school lunch programs and vending machines in schools.
Furthermore, the majority of adults have inadequate skills for controlling their weight.
Some changes have begun to occur. West Virginia has eliminated junk food in
vending machines in schools (Tyre 40). McDonald’s and other fast-food companies have
been begun to offer healthier alternatives to their fat-laden foods. Kraft Foods, the largest
food company in the United States, has begun an anti-obesity initiative by reducing
portions of popular snacks and providing more nutritional information (Walker). But
these are small steps in addressing the biggest health crisis of the twenty-first century.
The first major step in reducing obesity in children is to restrict marketing of junk
food to children. When the American public realized how effective Joe Camel ads were
in reaching children, their outrage led to a ban on many forms of cigarette advertising.
The food industry has no such restrictions and uses popular cartoon characters and actors
to pitch their products. According to advertising professor Vijay Netaji, children under
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age eight cannot distinguish programs from advertising, particularly when the same
characters are participating in both. Other countries including Belgium, Greece, Norway,
and Sweden now limit advertising directed toward children (Brownell and Horgen 121).
The United States should join these nations.
The second major step is to develop a campaign to educate children and parents
about healthy and unhealthy food. Children and their parents need to know more about
the health risks of obesity and how to follow healthier eating habits. Parents play an
important role in selecting what children eat, but children also need to be able to make
good choices about eating on their own.
The third major step is to promote a healthy life style though more exercise.
Exercise, like eating, is not simply a matter of personal choice. Many schools cannot
afford to provide physical education programs and activities that encourage exercise, and
many communities lack public space and facilities where people can exercise. More
exercise for children needs to be made a priority in schools and communities.
Step one can be accomplished by either voluntary restriction of marketing to
children or by legislation, but steps two and three will require major funding sources.
Margo Wootan of the consumer advocacy group, Center for Science in the Public
Interest, proposes that food companies support a public service campaign to promote
healthier eating and more exercise (“Generation”). Wootan’s proposal may be too
idealistic for the highly competitive food industry where profits mean survival.
Advocates for children’s health have proposed instead taxes on unhealthy food and soft
drinks similar to taxes on tobacco products that fund the campaign to reduce teenage
smoking (e.g., Brownell). Food tax proposals have been extremely controversial. The
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Center for Consumer Freedom, a group supported by the restaurant and food industry,
has launched ads against “fat taxes” and legal actions against junk food, arguing that
healthy food is a choice (“CCF”). The choice argument, however, is more difficult to
make for children.
If food taxes are the best way to promote healthier eating and more exercise
among children, would Americans support such a tax? A 2003 opinion poll sponsored by
the Harvard Forums on Health found that Americans are overwhelmingly in favor of
measures to fight obesity in children including banning vending machines that sell
unhealthy foods in schools and providing healthier school lunches (“Obesity”). Over
three quarters of the people sampled in the poll support a government-sponsored
advertising campaign for healthier eating and the creation of more public spaces for
exercise. The poll indicates that Americans are willing to pay higher taxes for these
programs, although the majority opposed specific taxes on junk food. Just as Americans
eventually woke up to the risks of smoking among young people and took decisive
action, they are gradually becoming aware of the threat of obesity to their children’s
future and, more important, starting to do something about it.
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Works Cited
Barboza, David. “If You Pitch It, They Will Eat.” New York Times 3 Aug. 2003, final
ed., sec. 3: 1+.
Brownell, Kelly D. “Get Slim with Higher Taxes.” New York Times 15 Dec. 1994, final
ed.: A29.
Brownell, Kelly D., and Katherine Battle Horgen. Food Fight: The Inside Story of the
Food Industry, America’s Obesity Crisis, and What We Can Do about It.
Chicago: Contemporary, 2004.
“CCF Ad Campaigns.” ConsumerFreedom.com. 2003. Center for Consumer Freedom. 18
Nov. 2003 <http://www.consumerfreedom.com/ad_campaign.cfm>.
Flegal, Katherine M., et al. “Prevalence and Trends in Obesity among US Adults, 1999-
2000.” JAMA 188 (2002): 1723-27.
“Generation XL; Middle Ground on Obesity.” Editorial. Boston Globe 11 Oct. 2003, 3rd
ed.: A18.
“Industry at a Glance.” Restaurant.org. 2003. National Restaurant Association. 18 Nov.
2003 <http://www.restaurant.org/research/ind_glance.cfm>.
Klesges, Robert C., Mary L. Shelton, and Lisa M. Klesges. “Effects of Television on
Metabolic Rate: Potential Implications for Childhood Obesity.” Pediatrics 91
(1993): 281-86. Expanded Academic ASAP. Thompson Gale. Perry-Casteñeda
Lib., U of Texas at Austin. 20 Nov. 2003 <http://www.gale.com/>.
Lee, Taeku, and J. Eric Oliver. “Public Opinion and the Politics of America’s Obesity
Epidemic.” May 2002. John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard U. 12
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Nov. 2003 <ksgnotes1.harvard.edu/Research/wpaper.nsf/rwp/RWP02-
017/$File/rwp02_017_lee.pdf>.
Netaji, Vijay. Telephone interview. 20 Nov. 2003.
“Obesity as a Public Health Issue: A Look at Solutions.” Harvard University Program for
Health Systems Improvement. 2003. Harvard Forums on Health. 18 Nov. 2003
<http://www.phsi.harvard.edu/health_reform/focus_on_obesity.php>.
“Participation Summary 2002-03.” Make a Difference. 2003. National Federation of
State High School Associations. 14 Nov. 2003
<http://www.nfhs.org/nf_survey_resources.asp>.
Robinson, Thomas N., and Joel D. Killen. “Obesity Prevention for Children and
Adolescents.” Body Image, Eating Disorders, and Obesity in Youth: Assessment,
Prevention, and Treatment. Ed. J. Kevin Thompson and Linda Smolak.
Washington, DC: APA, 2001. 261-92.
Schlosser, Eric. “The Bitter Truth about Fast Food.” Guardian 7 Apr. 2001, weekend
sec.: 13.
---. Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All-American Meal. New York: Perennial,
2002.
Spake, Amanda, and Mary Brophy Marcus. “A Fat Nation.” U.S. News & World Report
19 Aug. 2002: 40-47.
Tyre, Peg. “Fighting ‘Big Fat.’” Newsweek 5 Aug. 2002: 38-40.
Uhlenhuth, Karen. “Spoonful of Sugar Makes Appetites Go Up.” Advertiser 19 Jan.
2003: 39. LexisNexis Academic. LexisNexis. Perry-Casteñeda Lib., U of Texas at
Austin. 20 Nov. 2003 < http://www.lexis-nexis.com/>.
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United States. Department of Health and Human Services. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention. Prevalence of Overweight Among Children and Adolescents:
United States, 1999-2000. 24 Oct. 2002. 10 Nov. 2003
<http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/pubs/pubd/hestats/overwght99.htm>.
Walker, Andrea K. “Chipping Away at Fat.” Baltimore Sun 26 Sept. 2003, final ed.: C1.
LexisNexis Academic. LexisNexis. Perry-Casteñeda Lib., U of Texas at Austin.
20 Nov. 2003 < http://www.lexis-nexis.com/>.