Tag Archives: health

Let’s Move! FHBC Keynote with Shellie Pfohl

There was one session this weekend that reminded me of why I started blogging. It wasn’t to make friends. It wasn’t to make money. It wasn’t to amass as many readers as possible–it was to spread the message of how important it is to keep healthy. When I started blogging, a (very) healthy lifestyle was brand new to me, and I read and learned as much as I could and wanted to share that with others.

It’s no secret that we have an obesity epidemic on our hands in the United States, but I was unaware of quite the extent until I heard Shellie Pfohl’s keynote at the Fitness & Health Bloggers Conference on Friday. Pfohl was appointed by President Obama to serve as the executive director of the President’s Council on Fitness, Sports and Nutrition.

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Uh, but what is that, you ask?

The mission of the council is to “engage, educate and empower all Americans across the lifespan to adopt a healthy lifestyle that includes regular physical activity and good nutrition.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control (PDF), nearly 74 percent of Americans are overweight (BMI between 25-30), obese (BMI between 30-40) or very obese (a BMI of 40+.) That means most Americans are overweight. If you’re at a healthy weight and you lead a healthy lifestyle and it feels like you’re in the minority sometimes, it’s because you are.

It’s because fitness has been “engineered out of our lifestyle,” says Pfohl. As a country, we are less active than ever.

What seems most troubling is the correlation between overweight children and low income. The closer a child’s family is to the poverty line, according to this CDC study, the more likely he or she is to be overweight. Why? If you follow a healthy lifestyle, you know why. It doesn’t always come cheap.

And in some low-income areas, it can be difficult to find fresh, nutritious food–even if you want to. These areas are called “food deserts,” and the CDC has a really cool tool (hello data visualization geek here) called the Food Desert Locator that shows you where these food deserts are. (Can we also get a dessert locator?;))

Here’s a snapshot of the entire country’s food deserts:

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(Pretty troubling, if you ask me.)

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And a snapshot of the D.C. area. As you can see, most of the food deserts are concentrated in the Southeast D.C. area and just outside of there–none in the affluent NW D.C. area.

Thankfully, our government is doing more than just making pretty maps showing us where the problems are. As part of Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move initiative, the proposed Healthy Food Financing Initiative will work to expand the availability of fresh food to these deserts by “developing and equipping grocery stores, small retailers, corner stores, and farmers markets with fresh and healthy food.”

Not only does poor childhood nutrition make it difficult for a child to develop a healthy lifestyle, studies have shown that poor nutrition is also linked to poor test scores, making it difficult to succeed at getting out of poverty.

So what can you do?

  • Go to LetsMove.gov to join the mission to raise a healthier generation of kids by taking the pledge or finding a meetup in your area
  • Go HealthFinder.gov to find health information from the National Health Information Center
  • Join the President’s Challenge to live a healthier lifestyle (you can even get awards!)
  • Go to Idealist.org to find health or nutrition volunteer opportunities in your area

As the co-chair of the New York Junior League’s external communications committee, I’d be remiss if I didn’t spotlight some of the work our amazing organization has done in the area of health outreach.

Our CHAMP (Community Health Access Module Program)  develops and delivers preventative health education modules to the residents of at-risk and underserved communities; our Women’s Cancer Prevention Committee works to educate women about cancer and provide them with information about early detection and possible prevention of cancer; our Cooking and Health Education for Families committee educates adults and children on the value of good nutrition and exercise. Nationally, 200 Junior Leagues participate in the Kids in the Kitchen program, which teaches children about preparing healthy meals to educate them and their parents about the importance of making healthy choices.

What am I going to do to help continue to spread this message?

  • Continue to blog about it. Pfohl cited a BlogHer study that 88 percent of blog readers trust the information they read from familiar blogs. With our reach as bloggers, that gives us tremendous responsibility to provide important and accurate information to our readers. (Pro tip: if you want to find a government study or site, add “site:.gov” to your search. For example, to find a government study on childhood nutrition, search “childhood nutrition site:.gov”)
  • Find a way to volunteer to help underserved communities learn about nutrition. I have one more year serving in my current NYJL role(s) (I’m also joining a communications task force), and then I am going to join one of our health outreach committees.

What do you do to spread the message of health?

Knowing Your Limits

Last week I posted about being able to do anything I want, but not everything I want.

I alluded to feeling a little overextended and thinking about dropping the nutrition classes I’d been taking. The reason that I had wanted to take them in the first place was because I get a lot of questions from readers about how they can lose weight, too. I have a hard time answering those questions beyond “this is what works for me,” and I wanted to have a real background in nutrition to answer those questions.

But I just couldn’t make the time right now. The other things that take up my outside-of-work time–Junior League, blogging, training for races/working out–are frankly more important to me right now, and I couldn’t devote the time to these classes that they deserved. That, and I really need more downtime in my life, not less. So I admitted I couldn’t handle these classes right now and withdrew. I’d rather not take the classes right now than not be able to devote the attention necessary to them. I also have to admit I feel a lot lighter mentally since dropping them, but I haven’t ruled out picking them up again at some point.

I listened to my limits at the gym tonight, too. Liz had suggested I run four miles tonight, but I had zero energy. I don’t know if I’m still tired from my race, if I was a little tired from freaking out over having the mole removed or if I was a little dehydrated, but I ended up doing three and feeling as if I had just run a marathon. It took literally everything out of me both mentally and physically–which feels good sometimes. Afterwards, I laid in the steam room for a few minutes until some girl walked in totally naked and I felt uncomfortable and left. Maybe I’m a little prude, but the least I’ll ever wear in a steam room/sauna is shorts and a sports bra.

Just in case I was dehydrated, I bought a coconut water on my way out of the gym. Caitlin and Abby are enablers.

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When I got home, I roasted some broccoli and sweet potatoes and made a chicken pattie on some Nature’s Pride Hearty Wheat with Flax that I was sent as part of the Foodbuzz Tastemaker Program.

Breakfast was a sunflower butter and banana sandwich and lunch was Pump, so I spared you.