Published: September 09, 2008
Current Health News Articles Reveal Worldwide Obesity Epidemic Affecting Children -- Vision.org
Vision.org Examines School Meals in Our Society and Culture

Current health news articles indicate that the
worldwide obesity epidemic is affecting our children. In Western society
and culture, a third or more of our children's meals are school meals. Now
that summer is nearly over and it's time for children to go back school,
concerned parents are thinking of those school meals and their effect on
children's health. In an exclusive interview with Vision, Prue Leith, chair
of the United Kingdom's The School Food Trust and proponent of healthy
school meals, discusses current health
news articles on the obesity epidemic. "The scale of the problem is
really scary. We now have 35 percent of obese children." But she adds, "I
think this is perfectly fixable."

Leith gives practical tips and ideas for helping fix the obesity problem.
She details a dramatic success story from Finland, where the 35 percent
obesity rate was similar to that of the United Kingdom and the United
States as reported in current health news articles. Heavy, calorie-laden
foods were part of Finland's society and culture, but fifteen years after
implementing major changes in the school meal system, Finland's obesity
rate has plummeted to two percent.
She applauds Finland's educational approach, wherein each school meal
relates to a lesson in international society and culture. "What is being
eaten in the dining room is what's been going on in the classroom." In
addition, the children are "involved in serving and cleaning up. They all
work for a week in the kitchen so they get to know the process."
Leith encourages parents to start teaching their children about nutrition
at an early age. "We do know that the habits of eating are formed very,
very young
It would be much easier
if
parents fed them the right things
from four months old."
The influence of parents is imperative, but in our society and culture,
teachers also play an important role. Leith continues, "Little children
want to please their teachers; they want to please their parents. So if the
parents and teachers will encourage them to eat good food they will do it."
"You do not want children to die at an earlier age than you're going to
die. You don't want them to be handicapped because they haven't done well
in school and you want them to have a happy life. And frankly, obese
children do not have a happy life."
In Western society and
culture, school meals are an important factor in our children's current
health. News articles on the subject and an exclusive interview with Prue
Leith are part of a special report from Vision titled "Children's
Health and Nutrition," found at www.vision.org.
About Vision:
Vision.org is
an online magazine with quarterly print issues that feature in-depth
coverage of current social issues, religion and the Bible, history, family
relationship topics and insights into philosophical, moral and ethical
issues in society today. For a free subscription to the Vision quarterly
magazine, visit their web site at
http://www.vision.org/visionmedia/default.aspx.
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