Schools

VOTE: Nearly Half of Gilroy Kids Are Fat. What Should We Do?

What do we do about the fact that 43.6 percent percent of our 5th, 7th and 9th graders are overweight or obese. What should families do? What should government do?

 

Over 43 percent of Gilroy children are overweight or obese according to a study that says our city has the chubbiest teen and tween population in Santa Clara County.

The study was done by the California Center for Public Health Advocacy (CCPHA) and the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, and funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

Find out what's happening in Gilroyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“In general I’ve been looking at obesity in California for a few years now so the overall results didn’t surprise me. What did surprise me was that there were a number of cities that were above 50 percent," said Dr. Susan H. Babey, the chief researcher.

Researchers found that —the highest obesity rate out of 11 cities in Santa Clara County. Los Gatos has the lowest obestity rate with 15.4 percent of kids being overweight or obese.

Find out what's happening in Gilroyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The statewide average obesity rate of the more than 250 cities studied was 38 percent.

Rates ranged from as low as 11 percent in affluent Manhattan Beach to 53 percent for Huntington Park, a factory town. Both are in Los Angeles County. 

Lower income areas seem to have higher obesity rates, according to the study.

“These tend to also be the same areas that don’t have good access to grocery stores and farmers markets, and maybe have a glut of fast food restaurants and convenience stores," Babey said. Those areas also may not have parks or even safe sidewalks to walk on, she added.

Study calls for government action 

The study's authors detailed their methods and the ramifications of their findings, principally that overweight kids tend to grow into overweight adults with all the health problems associated therewith.

The findings are accompanied by nine policy recommendations, including:

  • eliminating the sale of fatty foods and high calorie drinks on public facilities;
  • establishing taxes on sugary drinks at the state and local levels to pay for the harmful effects of those products and remediate their effects;
  • eliminating advertising of unhealthy foods and beverages to children and youth.

Babey said focusing on changes in advertising was paramount to solving the problem in her mind, because there's already work in creating more access to healthy foods and playgrounds.

“I think one of the areas that we haven’t really made that many strides yet is the area of marketing to kids," she said.

Where do you stand?

Do you consider youth obesity primarily a family problem or a community problem? 

Would you put the primary responsibility on parents to cut back on junk foods and video games and promote healthier foods and exercise?

Or should the community play the leading role, all the way from promoting good food and exercise to imposing taxes and advertising restrictions?

Or do you favor a mixture of the above?

Leave a comment below and vote in our poll.

Are you Patched in? Get our free newsletter in your inbox every morning. Register here.

Into social media? So are we. Join us on FacebookTwitter or instagr.am (@gilroy_patch).

Want to blog on Gilroy Patch? Simply click here.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.