Title: Cindy Wolff
1Cindy Wolff
Making the Grade Diet, Fitness,
Performance Cindy Wolff, MPA, RD, PhD Center
for Nutrition Activity Promotion,
CSUC May 3, 2006
2Goals for Today
- Recognize the need for nutrition education and
physical activity promotion for students - Explain the link between diet, fitness, and
academic performance - Identify strategies for improving eating and
activity patterns for Butte County students
3Snapshot of American Kids
- Overfed but undernourished
- Declining physical activity
- Limited health literacy
4Overweight ? Diabetes Risk
5Overweight Harms Childrens Health
- Todays infants have a 1 in 3 chance of
developing diabetes. - A 1 in 2 chance if they are Hispanic or African
Am.
6Percentage of students who ate 5 or more servings
of fruits and vegetables per day during the past
7 days.
7Percentage of students who drank 3 or more
glasses of milk per day during the past 7 days.
8Students who did not participate in 20 min. of
vigorous physical activity on 3 of the past 7
days did not do 30 min. of moderate physical
activity on 5 of the past 7 days.
9CHILDREN MUST BE HEALTHY TO LEARN AND CHILDREN
MUST LEARN TO BE HEALTHY.
10Patterns Start Young
- Overweight at age 4
- predicts overweight at
- age 25.
- Overweight is easier and
- less expensive to prevent,
- than to treat.
11Butte CountyPreschoolers
- 34 to 47 of kids are either overweight or at
risk for overweight - Fast food is associated with increased weight
- Gyovai, Gonzales, Ferran, Wolff. Family eating
and activity habits - Associated with overweight risk among low-income
preschool - Children. CA J Health Prom, 2003.
12Overweight among Low-Income Butte County
Preschoolers
PedNSS data were used to calculate mean rates.
13BMI Categories for Butte County 4th 8th Graders
44 were 85th tile BMI-for-age
14BMI Groups by Ethnicity (n1,250)
The rate of overweight was higher for Hispanic
vs. White students (plt.001)
15Overweight among Native American K-9th Students
K - 3 Grades 4th - 9th Grades
16Rates of Overweight for 9th 10th Graders
(n111)
Percentage
BMI Group
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19Overweight Acanthosis
40 of overweight students are AN positive. The
majority are Hispanic.
20Overweight Hypertension
Normotensive lt90, Prehypertension 90-95th,
Hypertension gt95th
21Systolic Blood Pressure by BMI for 9th 10th
Graders (n96)
126 13
119 12
113 9
BMI Group
22Positive Attitude Toward Fruit/Veggies is
Associated with Lower BP in NA Students
Based on the Likert statement It is important
to eat 5 fruits vegies/ day (p.007)
23Fruit Vegetable Consumption
Grades with different letters are significantly
different (plt.001)
24Soda Is Associated With Both BMI Systolic BP
- Soda consumption gt 2 per day
- ? mean BMI by 2.2 units 23.1 vs. 20.9 (p
.004) - ? mean Systolic BP of 7 mmHg 113 vs. 106 mmHg
(p .002)
25 CA Fitnessgram
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275th Graders are Sedentary
- At the end of week 1 only 34 met the goal of
12,000 steps/day - Assumption is that lt 34 met the goal prior to
the start of StepFit - 11,062 was average steps/day for week 1
289th 10th Graders Achieving 12,000 Steps Per Day
(n44, plt.05)
35
33
29
Percentage
17
Week
29Nutrition Enhances Achievement
30Fitness Enhances Achievement
31Nutrition Enhances Achievement
- Comprehensive School Health
- Reading and math scores of 3rd 4th graders with
comprehensive health educ. were significantly
higher (Schoener, et al, 1988) - School Breakfast Programs
- Improve academic achievement, reduce visits to
the school nurse, decrease behavioral problems
(Murphy, et al, 1998) - Improve academic performance absenteeism among
low-income elementary school students (Meyers,
et al, 1989) - Enhance nutrient intake which was associated with
significant improvements in academic performance.
32Overweight Inhibits Achievement
- Change from not overweight to overweight status
during the 1st 4 yrs in school is a significant
risk factor for adverse school outcomes - Reductions in test scores
- Increased absences
- Increased behavioral problems among girls (Sturm,
2006)
33Physical Education, Too
- Students who participated in PE programs did not
experience a harmful effect on their standardized
test scores (Sallis, et al, 1999 Shephard, 1996
Dwyer, et al, 1983) - Physical activity is positively associated
with academic performance (Dwyer, et al, 1996) - Regular (35 times/wk) physical
activity enhances the health,
academic performance, attitudes and
classroom behavior of children at school (Keays
Allison, 1995)
34State Study Shows Physically Fit Kids Perform
Better Academically
- Higher achievement was associated with higher
levels of fitness. - Students who met minimum fitness levels in 3 or
more physical fitness areas showed the greatest
gains in academic achievement.
35Children receive about 1/3 of their daily
calories at school. Schools can offer healthier
foods and not lose revenues.
36Call To Action
- Ensure daily, quality physical education in all
school grades. - Ensure that schools provide healthful foods and
beverages on school campuses and at school
events. - Adopt policies specifying that all foods and
beverages available at school
contribute toward eating patterns
that are consistent with the
Dietary Guidelines.
37Congress Reinforced This Call
- The Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization of
2004 requires every local district to develop and
implement a Wellness Policy by fall of 2006.
38Why School Wellness?
Health and success in school are interrelated.
-
- Schools cannot achieve their mission of education
if students staff are not healthy fit
physically, mentally, socially. - Experts recommend that schools take an active
role in preventing disabling health conditions
that - create misery
- consume an
excessive share of our resources.
39Thank You!
- Cindy Wolff
- 898-5288
- cwolff_at_csuchico.edu
Marty Mares 345-0678 mmares_at_scnac.org
Kelley Marty 345-0678 kmarty_at_scnac.org