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Vermont Obesity Programs



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Old 03-04-05, 06:41 AM   #1 (permalink)
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Weight Statistics

8/1/2006
Start Date:
185 lb
Start Weight:
152 lb
Current Weight:
155 lb
Goal Weight:
-33 lb
Weight Loss:
5/1/2007
Goal Date:
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Vermont Obesity Programs

The Epidemic
56% of Vermont adults are overweight or obese. (CDC BRFSS, 2003)
The obesity rate for Vermont adults rose by 77% from 1990 to 2002. (CDC BRFSS, 2002)
26% of Vermont high school students are overweight or at risk of becoming overweight. (CDC YRBSS, 2003)
29% of low-income children between 2 and 5 years of age in Vermont are overweight or at risk of becoming overweight. (CDC PedNSS, 2002)


Program Priorities
The Vermont Department of Health adopted the following objectives for the prevention of obesity in 2001:

Increase the percentage of middle schools and junior high schools that require daily physical education for all students.

Reduce the percentage of youth who are overweight or at risk for overweight.

Increase the percentage of people who eat at least two daily servings of fruit.

Increase the percentage of people who eat at least three daily servings of vegetables.

Reduce the percentage of adults who are overweight.

Reduce the percentage of adults who are obese.

Partners
The Vermont Department of Health is identifying and recruiting potential public and private sector partners. The state has a number of existing coalitions dealing with health issues and these will serve as models for the obesity prevention coalition and as resources for identifying and recruiting partners.


Recent Accomplishments and Products
A coordinating council for the obesity prevention program will be formed.

A burden of obesity report will be completed.

A comprehensive inventory of current strategies and program related to obesity will be conducted.

An obesity monitoring and surveillance plan will be developed.

Criteria for prioritizing and selecting interventions will be identified.

Upcoming Events and Products
A City of Moses Lake spring festival to promote environmental changes that increase opportunities for physical activity.
Statewide workshops for local child care health consultants.
An obesity, nutrition, and physical activity Web site.
Project Period: 2004–2008
Year First Funded: 2004
Funding Stage: Capacity Building
Contact Person:
Susan Coburn, RD
Interim Program Coordinator
Vermont Department of Health
Telephone: 802-951-5151
E-mail: scoburn@vdh.state.vt.us

Data Sources
CDC BRFSS — CDC’s Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
CDC PedNSS — CDC’s Pediatric Nutrition Surveillance System
CDC YRBSS — CDC’s Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System

http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpa/obes...ms/vermont.htm
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Old 09-19-06, 08:42 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Weight Statistics

8/1/2006
Start Date:
185 lb
Start Weight:
152 lb
Current Weight:
155 lb
Goal Weight:
-33 lb
Weight Loss:
5/1/2007
Goal Date:
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Re: Vermont

Mrs. Lynch walks, feds send money to fight childhood obesity






CONCORD, N.H. New Hampshire's first lady is going for a walk and the feds are sending the state a grant -- all to help fight childhood obesity.

Doctor Susan Lynch heads to Lancaster and Berlin today to walk with school kids as part of a program called Walk NH. It's designed to show children aged six to 12 how to have fun getting in shape. Kids pledge to walk the equivalent of the length or width of New Hampshire, adding up miles as they walk to school, hike or just stroll around their neighborhoods.

Meanwhile, the federal government is sending the state 340 thousand dollars to start an anti-obesity project in its program for pregnant women and pre-schoolers.

New Hampshire was among five states chosen for the project.

(Lancaster Elementary School, 10 a.m.; Berlin Junior High, 1 p.m.)

Childhood Obesity Fight]http://www.wcax.com/Global/story.asp?S=5426316&nav=4QcS]Childhood Obesity Fight
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Old 09-24-06, 05:27 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Weight Statistics

8/1/2006
Start Date:
185 lb
Start Weight:
152 lb
Current Weight:
155 lb
Goal Weight:
-33 lb
Weight Loss:
5/1/2007
Goal Date:
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Re: Vermont

Vt. is addressing obesity problem

September 24, 2006

By JAMES TASSE

Imagine if a third of the population of the U.S. had a life-threatening infectious disease. The government would be looking for evidence of a terrorist plot. It would be perceived as a crisis of epidemic proportions.

Well, that's the situation with obesity right now. Thirty percent of Americans are obese — not overweight, but obese — right now. These individuals are facing substantially elevated risk of premature death due to chronic health problems such as diabetes, heart disease and cancer.

Vermont is doing better than the national average, with only about 20 percent of the adult population classified as obese. However, the Vermont Department of Health reports that 56 percent of Vermonters are overweight, a condition which also carries significantly elevated risks.

The epidemic is costly not only to the quality of life enjoyed by Vermonters but to our wallets as well. According to statistics from the VDH, obesity costs the state more than $141 million. Each person in the state of Vermont pays out about $228 to cover the costs of obesity, whether or not they are obese.

The VDH has developed a plan to fight the obesity epidemic by helping Vermonters make better lifestyle choices and by encouraging folks to increase physical activity and improve their diets. The Fit and Healthy Vermonters Obesity Prevention Plan is a multi-pronged attack on the problem that seeks to achieve the following goals:



Reduce the prevalence of chronic diseases associated with those who are overweight and obesity


Reduce the proportion of Vermonters who are above a healthy weight


Increase fruit and vegetable consumption


Reduce portion sizes


Reduce consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages


Increase physical activity


Decrease sedentary behaviors


Increase breastfeeding initiation, exclusivity and duration

The plan encourages communities to adopt a variety of tactics to pursue these goals, including doing things like building sidewalks, walking trails and bike lanes, coordinating activity programs and working to educate the public on the need to change behaviors and diet choices.

The Department of Health is launching a series of forums around the state to inform people about the Obesity Prevention plan. The goal of the forums is to bring people up to date on current initiatives to fight obesity in their areas and to mobilize new community-based efforts to achieve these goals.

One such forum is happening on Oct. 10 from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. at the Rutland Regional Medical Center Conference Room. To learn about other forums around the state, contact the Obesity Prevention Plan Coordinator, Susan Coburn, at 951-5151.

While we're putting dates on the calendar, you might also mark Oct. 4, which is International Walk to School Day. This is a great opportunity to encourage your kids to get to school under their own power and to help them develop the habits to keep them immune from the obesity epidemic.

James Tasse is the director of the Rutland Area Physical Activity Coalition. Tasse and Becka Roolf write columns on alternating weeks.



Obesity fight in Vermont
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Old 04-07-07, 05:57 PM   #4 (permalink)
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Weight Statistics

8/1/2006
Start Date:
185 lb
Start Weight:
152 lb
Current Weight:
155 lb
Goal Weight:
-33 lb
Weight Loss:
5/1/2007
Goal Date:
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Re: Vermont Obesity Programs

Center hosts childhood obesity conference

April 7, 2007
By Stephen Seitz Herald Staff
BROWNSVILLE — There are ways to teach adolescents and their younger counterparts healthy living habits, and the Southern Vermont Area Health Education Center examined some of them at an all-day workshop for health professionals held at the Mt. Ascutney resort on Wednesday.

"Adolescents are not an age group that is well understood," said SVAHEC executive director Nancy Lenoue. "We need to get information to the professionals."

More than 100 physicians, nurses, teachers, social workers and other professionals learned about such topics as understanding the nature of childhood obesity and eating disorders, how to talk to kids about being overweight without triggering an eating disorder, and new approaches to the problem of childhood obesity, which was the topic of Dr. David Ludwig's keynote address.

Ludwig is an associate professor of pediatrics at Harvard and directs the Children's Optimal Weight for Life Program at Children's Hospital in Boston. He is the author of the forthcoming book on childhood obesity titled, "Ending the Food Fight."

Ludwig said that what is needed to treat obesity and avert the onset of Type 2 diabetes is to slow down the surge in blood sugar that follows a meal, and to return more traditional ways of eating and exercising.

"Consumption of sweetened soda has increased 500 percent since the 1950s," Ludwig said, noting that he wasn't all that fond of the food pyramids periodically updated by the government.

"Without any specific guidance on this point, the food industry weighs in," said Ludwig. "They're putting out low-fat Twinkies and calling them health food."

Instead, Ludwig suggested making good food flavorful for children.

"I see no reason to restrict oils," he said. "You have to use some common sense, of course, but there's nothing wrong with cooking vegetables in a little olive oil. It makes them taste better."

Ludwig described a vicious cycle that makes adolescents gain weight: too much TV and computer time, eating junk food during these times, and not spending enough time moving around. He also said not to confuse exercise with physical activity.

"Exercise is not related to weight loss," he said, though he did note that exercise is important to good health. "Physical activity is not the same as exercise. Lean people, for instance, are constantly moving, and they burn 350 calories a day."

Ludwig advised keeping the TV set off during meal times, not allowing more than two hours of viewing per day, and to combine physical activities with fun. He further noted that unhappy and dysfunctional homes more often produce overweight children.

"They are overwhelmingly from psychosocial environments that don't support them," he said.

Lanoue is directly involved with addressing the problems of childhood obesity, as she also directs SVAHEC's 30+5 program which works with a number of schools and health care organizations in Windsor County to get middle schoolers eating more healthily and becoming more physically active.

The program's name reflects its goal of getting students to exercise vigorously for 30 minutes, and to eat at least five fruits, every day.

"We're gearing up for the next school year," she said. "We'll be assessing the students' fitness logs, and assess the activities. The activities have become quite popular, so we'll have more of them."

More information on SVAHEC's programs can be found on its Web site, www.southernvermontahec.org.

Childhood Obesity
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