Fitness Fun and Obesity Prevention in Children
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As children head back to school this fall, parents,
caregivers, health professionals,
and educators all play a role in supporting
healthy behaviors in children.
While eating healthy is an important aspect of
preventing obesity and becoming
overweight, keeping active also has a key
part.
At school, children may be confined to sitting and sedentary behavior
more often than summer break.
The
American Heart Association recommends that all children age 2 and older
should:
· Participate in at least 60 minutes of
enjoyable,
moderately intense physical activities every day that are
developmentally
appropriate and varied.
· If your child or children don't have a full
60-minute activity break each day,
try to provide at least two 30-minute
periods or four 15-minute periods in which they
can engage in vigorous activities appropriate to their age, gender and stage of physical
and
emotional development.
Here
are some helpful suggestions to motivate children to meet these
recommendations:
1. Make exercise fun. There
is no reason to call exercise what it is.
Fun games like hop scotch, tag,
or skipping rope can all make a child smile while getting exercise.
2. Make time for exercise. Add a place
for exercise into your daily and weekly
schedules with activities that your
children will love. If you don’t have
enough time,
try putting exercise into other essential tasks, for example,
clean up time can also
be an activity that involves walking back and forth.
It can also be made into a game
with extra activities, such as the slowest to
clean up one section does x amount of jumping jacks.
3. Play some fast paced music and
have a dance party. Make up some dance moves
or integrate some
calisthenics into your dance routine, then do a show at the end
of the week
for family or friends!
4.
Make exercise an activity for the whole
family. When everyone participates in exercising,
it can be both
motivating and meaningful for children.
5.
Give gifts that encourage fitness or
exercise. Types of gifts can include
small trampolines, hula hoops, jump
ropes, hop-scotch, and bouncy balls.
6.
Walk or bike whenever possible. If
you have places that you normally
visit that are nearby, establish safe
routes that encourage more walking or biking.
7.
Visit parks or playgrounds. Go places that encourage activeness.
Playgrounds,
children’s museums, and parks are excellent choices
where kids can have fun
while also staying active.
8.
Keep kids active when watching
television or sitting in front of a screen.
The American Academy of
Pediatrics recommends no more than
“two hours of daily media exposure”for
children 2 and up. Parents and kids
can take charge with healthy habits as fall begins and
school returns,
getting back into a fall routine would be much more
interesting by clearly setting
health goals for families. Also, setting up a
meal planning system is great to let kids know that
healthy eating continues
into fall with a few new choices.
References and Additional
Reading:
Written by:
Zainab Sanadi
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Friday, December 9, 2016
FITNESS FUN AND OBESITY PREVENTION IN CHILDREN
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