Posts Tagged ‘healthy lifestyle’

Weight Loss Camp: Prevent Childhood Obesity Consequences

Monday, February 6th, 2012

Almost one third of children in America are overweight or obese. Some parents not only take no action to get their child’s weight under control, by sending them to weight loss camps for example, but go to further measures to reassure the child that being overweight is ok. If your child is “fluffy” or “has more to love,” there are some things you should know about their future, potentially dangerous, health outcomes.

First of all, the psychological effects of teasing, bullying, and self esteem can be so extreme for children. Depression is usually a side effect of childhood obesity. You can build your child up as much as you can, but you cannot control what other children say. This is most likely the reason for parents that praise their children who are overweight, but there are much healthier and effective solutions.

Think about your child’s heart. Younger and younger people are having problems with cholesterol and hypertension, due to the decreasing age of obesity onset. Problems like insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes are more likely to occur in people who were obese as children, even if they lose weight and adapt a healthy lifestyle later in life. That being said, if you have an obese child, they are far more likely to continue this unhealthy lifestyle into adulthood and may be set up for weight-management failure at a young age.

Breathing problems occur too. Many children have issues developmentally due to obesity and inactivity that result in sleep apnea and asthma. Children with sleep apnea can awaken up to 15 times an hour! There is no way your child can get the recommended amount of sleep waking up that many times. Another rising problem associated with childhood obesity is non alcoholic cirrhosis. Children develop a fatty liver due to overconsumption of calories, mainly fructose (High- fructose corn syrup). It is a phenomenon that doctors were baffled by when young children were developing diseases associated with aged alcoholics!

Another negative side effect of childhood obesity that is normally not recognized as such is skeletal problems. When a child is extremely overweight, growth and development of the skeletal structure is compromised and there is a chance of deformations. Joint pain is also more prevalent with all the weight on their joints. Overweight kids also have more of an issue with balance, so they tend to break bones more. This is a problem, because healing is complicated. Splints and casts are less effective and can cause skin problems due to abnormally large limbs. Treatment usually involves surgery (rods, pins, etc.), which leaves room for post-surgery infection.

It may be hard to approach the situation of childhood obesity, since we all love our children and don’t want them to feel like there is something wrong with them. But if you don’t help them combat this problem now, it will only escalate into worse problems. So get some help if diet and exercise don’t work- perhaps they would benefit from a structured weight loss camp, such as Camp Shane for children and teens. It is not ok for your child to be morbidly obese at a young age.

Childhood Obesity Health Complications

Childhood obesity can lead to a variety of health complications. Prevent these health problems by sending your child to a fun summer weight loss camp.

Written by Amanda Yazbek, Nutritionist at Camp Shane weight loss camp for kids

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Healthy Lifestyle During Heart Health Month

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

Healthy Lifestyle with Nutritious Family Meals

Enjoy nutritious meals as a family to encourage a healthy lifestyle and fight childhood obesity.

A Gallup poll released in January reported that the percentage of obese Americans has decreased slightly for the first time in three years (down to 26.1% from 26.6%). This is good step in the long-term effort toward reducing obesity, an effort we are a part of with our friends at the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation. HWCF is made up of organizations with a shared desire to educate the public on the concept of “energy balance” – that a healthy weight is a result of balancing “calories in” (what we eat) with “calories-out” (what we burn through exercise). There are many reasons people struggle with weight, and all kinds of ways those issues get complicated. But by simplifying it down to this balance, hopefully we can encourage our friends, families and communities to make changes.

At Shane Weight Loss Camps & Resorts we offer weight loss programs for children, teenagers and adults to encourage our community to live active, healthy lifestyles.

February brings Valentine’s Day and Heart Health Month, so it’s a perfect opportunity to plan nutritious meals and activities with your loved ones to encourage “energy balance” in everyday life. Themed meals can be a fun way to introduce new and nutritious options into your family’s menu. Explore all the great winter activities available right outside the door. Throw a neighborhood snowball fight, go sledding or build a snowman. On the days you are stuck inside, take advantage of online resources. Paul Pierce of the Boston Celtics (and fellow HWCF associate member) has great videos that demonstrate exercises you can do right at home!

HWCF has developed an online community dedicated to helping families keep track of their energy balance. The Together Counts ™ campaign was created to provide encouragement, accountability, and new ideas for families looking to build active, healthy lifestyles. Go to www.togethercounts.com and join today!

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Top Ten Healthy Lifestyle Tips for Your Kids

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

Physical activity is such an important part of your kid’s fitness plan after returning home from his or her weight loss camp and it is important to stay on track in the new year. In this day and age, it is much harder to stay physically active for weight loss. Children want to be entertained by electronics such as television, computers, video games, iPods, and cell phones. The key is to reduce screen time and make physical activity fun and lead by example by participating in physical activity with them. Here are a few ideas to get moving!

  1. Healthy Lifestyle: Family Bike Ride

    Keep your child fit and healthy after weight loss camp by going for a family bike ride.

    Visit the playground often

  2. Walk to places with your child instead of driving
  3. Take your child to the swimming pool or beach
  4. Kick around a soccer ball or shoot some hoops
  5. Get a bicycle and go on rides together
  6. Encourage games and sports with other kids
  7. Make physical activity imaginative- hop like a bunny or jump like a frog
  8. Run races together
  9. Build an obstacle course and encourage your child to use it
  10. Let your child do household chores that keep them active- like vacuuming or mowing the lawn

Of course, you may have to get a little creative during the winter when outdoor activities are limited, but definitely take advantage of the warmer days! What family activities do you participate in with your children to keep them active and healthy, to fight childhood obesity? We would love to hear your own ideas!

Written by Amanda Yazbek, Nutritionist at Camp Shane weight loss camp for children and teens

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Healthy Lifestyle City Farm: Supermarket of the Future?

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

Isn’t it such a hassle trying to find certain ingredients for your recipe, but they’re not all available in one market? It would be so much easier to have all of the choices available in one place. That dream may become a reality for some people in the near future. According to a recent article on CNN.com by George Webster, a group of Dutch architects are planning a “Park Supermarket,” an urban farming project that will attempt to grow and sell all of the food of a modern supermarket in one place. This may also be a big step for any weight loss diet, as it will offer healthy diet options and fresh locally-grown produce.

Healthy Lifestyle Park Supermarket

Concept for healthy lifestyle park supermarket, where consumers can choose their own fresh produce.

This plan calls for the park supermarket to be constructed in Randstad, Holland’s largest metropolitan area. In defiance of the country’s moderate climate, the architects say they have devised a system to control the park’s outdoor environment, using old and new farming technologies to simulate Mediterranean and tropical climates in an ecologically sustainable way.

“The cities surrounding the proposed site are home to 170 different eating cultures — from Moroccan to Indonesian, from Turkish to Chinese — and we’re aiming to grow food to satisfy all their tastes,” said Jago van Bergen, one of the brains behind the “Park Supermarket,”

“The plan is to divide the park into three climate zones — moderate, Mediterranean and tropical. Because this will also be a recreational space, our goal is to make it as open as possible, without using greenhouses,” he said.

The Park Supermarket plan does not appeal to everyone.

“Anything that reduces food miles and other carbon emissions linked to food production is normally a positive thing,” said Dr Nicola Canon, lecturer in crop sciences at the UK’s Royal Agricultural College. “However, I have reservations about any system that creates open artificial climates.

“We know that we are suffering from climate change, with one area enduring long wet spells while another goes through a prolonged drought. I wonder if we really ought to be exploring technologies that seek to control our already unpredictable weather cycles.”

Canon is also concerned that the introduction of alien climates may also precipitate the introduction of alien pests.

“Every time you raise humidity, you raise disease affectability — because where you have good conditions for growth you also have good conditions for disease to grow. I think creating tropical climates next to moderate ones could introduce a host of new diseases and pests to the region in quite an unpredictable way,” she warned.

For van Bergen, this type of criticism misses the point, because he sees the Park Supermarket as just one of many possible alternatives to the existing system of food production.

“I’m not a preacher of any one form of agriculture,” he said. “Just like our energy, I think our future food supplies will have to come from a variety of sources, using a variety of methods — of which we are sure this will be one.

“But this is about more than sustainable, non-intensive farming, it’s about cultivating community ties and giving new meaning to a space on the edge of the city that is currently being used for very little else.”

What are your thoughts on this Park Supermarket? Could this be beneficial to our country to fight childhood obesity and encourage weight loss through healthy eating? Besides healthy lifestyle benefits, could it potentially benefit the economy as well? We would love to hear your thoughts on this one!

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Together Counts – Families Can Share Tips for Healthy Living

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012

Together Counts – Families Can Share Tips for Healthy Living

It’s time to set new goals for the New Year! It’s cold outside, the kids are home – the perfect opportunity to relax and spend time together. To start the New Year off right, the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation and Camp Shane can help your family reach your health goals.

Make resolutions this month like trying new, nutritious recipes. Why not bring out the slow cooker? This will keep food warm while you pick up the kids. Save the leftovers for lunch the next day in individual plastic bags, and teach kids about portion control. To help families achieve healthy lifestyles, the Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation developed the Together Counts™ program (www.togethercounts.com). Families can share tips like these and more using the Together Counts™ programs available at www.togethercounts.com.

Cold weather shouldn’t stop your family from being active. Plan a family game night, play hide-and-seek, or organize a scavenger hunt around the house. Outdoor activities will help avoid cabin fever. If your children are able to, find a local ice-skating rink or sled down a hill in the neighborhood.

Do you want your child’s school to have a fresh start this New Year? Find out if they’re using the Energy Balance 101 curriculum, and learn about the $130,000 in prizes being awarded to Energy Balance 101 schools each year. This is the last month to enter to win the Healthy Playground Makeover Sweepstakes which includes a $30,000 grant and a playground makeover. The Find Your Balance Challenge allows elementary school classrooms to win a grant for their schools. Go to energybalance101.com for more information.

This month, talk to your family and write down the top 10 things you need to change to obtain a healthier lifestyle – let this be your guide for the New Year.

Camp Shane is also promoting activities that encourage the development of healthy habits while spending time together as a family.  Cooking and eating together as well as family oriented exercise is important to the health of the entire family.

Source:  Healthy Weight Commitment Foundation

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