When a neighbourhood has soccer pitches, baseball diamonds, basketball courts, playgrounds and green spaces, does it guarantee that the community is healthy? Is it a place where families choose to be outside and engage in physical activity?
The answer to that is no: The facilities give families the chance to exercise, but those opportunities need to be taken. And the fact is, research shows that more and more young people are choosing to be sedentary – and their parents aren’t necessarily urging them to get off their smartphones and get on their bikes.
So, are our kids healthy? Or rather, do they know enough about nutrition and exercise to make healthy choices for themselves?
Dr. Sangita Sharma, a University of Alberta expert on nutrition, led a study that looked at 557 Edmonton Public School kids: 120 were aboriginals, 230 were new Canadians, and 207 were non-aboriginal and non-new Canadian. The goal was to get a large, representative sample of kids going to school in Edmonton, whether they were in poorer neighbourhoods or the wealthier communities in the city.
The draft report is the first phase of Sharma’s study, and was supported by the Public Health Agency of Canada and Alberta Health Services. The study found that 17.6 per cent of the kids were overweight and 9.1 per cent had obesity issues. Sharma emphasizes that these are preliminary findings. But, while the numbers aren’t great – indicating that nearly one in five EPS kids is overweight – they are certainly better than what we are seeing from the United States. The most recent National Survey of Children’s Health in the U.S. found that more than 31 per cent of kids were overweight or obese.
Looking at the draft numbers from Sharma’s work, we can say this: In a time when we should be more educated about the benefits of exercise and healthy eating than any other point in human history, our kids are gaining weight.
Or, is the amount of nutrition information out there being drowned out by the heavy advertising and marketing campaigns by the packaged-food companies?