July 13, 2010 2:08 PM

First Lady Holds Live Chat on Childhood Obesity

By
Jaywon Choe
Topics
Domestic Issues

First lady Michelle Obama hosts a fall harvest of the White House vegetable garden with help of students from Washington's Bancroft and Kimball Elementary schools.

(Credit: Getty Images)

Stepping up her "Let's Move" initiative against childhood obesity, First Lady Michelle Obama today held her first-ever live video chat to answer questions and concerns about the epidemic.

The campaign, which Obama launched in February, is designed to raise awareness about the issue and spotlight the fact that nearly one in three children in the United States is either overweight or obese.

In the chat, Obama stressed the importance of practicing better eating habits and doing more exercise. And she argued that better practices start with parents.

"We are our children's best, first and often times only role models," Obama said.

While she acknowledged that parents today live busy lives and are often strapped for time -- she said she knows what that is like - the first lady emphasized that "families can make small, manageable changes" that can help their children.

Among them, she said, are removing processed foods from the kitchen and cooking at least one good meal per week. She also emphasized the importance of limiting TV consumption.

"We stopped TV during the week, [and] our kids had to find a way to keep themselves entertained," she said. "We did things like go outside, throw a ball, turn on the radio, go dancing."

Obama also advised parents to frame exercise in a fun way to help encourage children to get off the couch.

"I think we should talk about physical activities as play, which is actually what it is," she said. "I think our goal is to make sure that we're not treating this like a task or a penalty. That's the trick with kids, getting them to do things that are good for them without them realizing it."

President Obama's well-documented predilection for fast food was also a topic of discussion during the interview.

"One of the reasons why he and I don't shy away from fast food is because we want our kids to know about balance," the first lady said.

She added: "It's not about saying no forever to ice cream and French fries, because no one can sustain that. What we talk about is that those are special treats. [There's] nothing wrong with getting your popcorn at the movies..."

But while the first lady talked heavily about the obesity issue, she also warned of some of the serious consequences associated with focusing too heavily on weight loss.

"The flip side to obesity can be eating disorders and we certainly don't want to enforce the reverse trend," she said. "The campaign 'Let's Move' is not about how our kids look. It's really about how our kids feel and our health."

She advised parents not to talk specifically about weight loss, but rather to make their focus "an overall health picture."

"My husband and I try to make a good healthy lifestyle a part of what we're doing," she said. "We try to talk little or not at all about weight."

The first lady also spoke last night at the NAACP National Convention, where she also highlighted the perils of obesity, especially among African American families.

"Surely the men and women of the NAACP haven't spent a century organizing and advocating and working day and night only to raise the first generation in history that might be on track to live shorter lives than their parents," she said.

She added that currently 23.5 million Americans, including 6.5 million children, live in what she called "food deserts" -- areas without a single supermarket. The issue, she said, is "particularly serious in African American communities where folks wind up buying their groceries at places like gas stations and bodegas and corner stores where they often pay higher prices for lower-quality food."

With one of the initiative's four main pillars being improved access to healthy affordable foods, Obama said that she is dedicated to helping reduce the number of food deserts around the country.


Add a Comment
by kirkdouglassd July 13, 2010 5:53 PM EDT
If Michelle Obama truly cared about childhood obesity she would be actively putting a stop to harmful chemicals, unnecessary preservatives and sweeteners and insane amounts of sodium in foods. Instead, she is handing out food that kids don't know the name of. We couldn't possibly have an administrative that approached this subject with genuine, proactive changes like annihilating High Fructose Corn Syrup from foods and making local and natural foods more affordable and more easily obtainable. Its all a show, its branding to ensure the public image of the Obama's goes untarnished. Quite frankly, its a damn shame. Don't get me wrong -- Michelle certainly does seem driven but why is it that every time someone in our government has [fundamentally] good ideas they have to go and half-ass it? Really.... You can't convince me that we can't do more and do BETTER than this. It is absolutely achievable.
Reply to this comment
by captaingrouper July 13, 2010 5:03 PM EDT
I have "the" perfect name for Michelle's new program.... "No behind left behind." OMG that is awesome!
Reply to this comment
by dadirt July 13, 2010 2:58 PM EDT
Who cares! If they are starving to death, how come they are so fat! It must be all the free food the schools and local governments are giving them!
Reply to this comment
by nolieshere July 14, 2010 1:59 AM EDT
No doubt about it... you're going to he11!
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