Release Date: Dec. 30, 2004
GOVERNMENT SOLUTIONS
WON’T CURE KIDS’ OBESITY, SURVEY SAYS
By Becky Ham, Science Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Most Americans endorse
public efforts to reduce childhood obesity but don’t
want to do so through taxes or regulation, a new survey reveals.
Almost 91 percent of those
surveyed thought parents “have a lot of responsibility” for
childhood obesity, with only 16 percent saying the government holds a significant
amount of responsibility, according to the report in the American Journal of
Preventive Medicine. People could list multiple sources of responsibility.
“The public clearly wants to reduce unhealthy, and increase healthy,
food consumption among children and adolescents. However, they are wary about
accomplishing these goals through intensive regulation or taxation” say
W. Douglas Evans, Ph.D., and colleagues at RTI International, a North Carolina
not-for-profit research institute.
For instance, the survey
participants generally supported ideas like restricting the availability
of unhealthy
foods in school vending machines and cafeterias
but they opposed raising the costs of these foods or implementing a “junk
food tax,” the researchers found.
Those surveyed were also overwhelmingly in favor of nutrition and exercise
education in schools but not at the expense of other subjects like reading,
math and science.
The national survey of 1,047 households, conducted between January and March
2004, revealed that 41 percent believe that childhood overweight and obesity
is a serious problem. Most of the people surveyed said junk food and fast food,
followed by too much time spent in front of the television, are the biggest
culprits.
Although the survey participants did not want to see specific taxes on foods,
more than 70 percent said they would support a $25 income tax increase to support
government or school-sponsored childhood obesity intervention programs.
Evans and colleagues also
found that households with children at home and individuals with at least
some
college education were less likely to support
school-based programs like regular weigh-ins and weight “report cards” sent
home to parents, similar to those used by Arkansas public schools in 2004.
“This is the first survey to compare and contrast support for specific
types of childhood interventions that have recently been implemented or proposed.
Such data are likely to be of great interest to policymakers and others who
might consider endorsing specific interventions,” Evans says.
“However,” he adds, “relatively
little scientific information exists on which of these interventions are
effective in actual school, community
and media settings.”
Overweight and obesity rates among children and teens have tripled since the
1980s, now reaching 15 percent of the child population.
The study was supported by RTI International.
FOR
MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829
or www.hbns.org.
Center for
the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Vice President of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
press@cfah.org
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