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Combating Child Obesity a Priority
As published in the AJC
http://www.ajc.com/opinion/combating-child-obesity-a-1326994.html
The devastating facts on diabetes are about as awful as they come. Diabetes is a
chronic disease that often leads to blindness, nerve damage, kidney failure and
even death. It plagues our state and causes more deaths each year in the United
States than breast cancer and AIDS combined.
By the time we reach age 65, statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention statistics indicate half of us will have diabetes or pre-diabetes.
And yet, all too often, we overlook the most important fact — overwhelmingly,
the vast majority of cases are entirely preventable.
Many Americans believe that diabetes is strictly genetic, and we have little
control over whether the condition will develop. This is likely true for
genetically influenced Type I diabetes in which a faulty immune system affects
insulin production. Insulin is critical in regulating blood glucose levels.
While the exact cause that triggers Type I diabetes is unclear, we do know that
Type I diabetes accounts for only 5 percent of diabetes cases in the United
States. Enter Type II.
An astonishing 95 percent of all diabetes cases are Type II. Millions of
Americans are living with this chronic disease, and the most important causative
factors are poor diet and a lack of physical activity. If you think this is
familiar to another issue we in Georgia struggle with, you’re absolutely right.
Obesity is a major physical indicator that someone might have pre-diabetes or
diabetes. We must focus on our future.
With one in five of our precious children classified as obese — earning Georgia
the second highest childhood obesity rate in the U.S. — we must focus first on
combating childhood obesity. We’re starting with SHAPE — the Student Health and
Physical Education Act — which requires all students enrolled in physical
education classes to participate in a fitness assessment with individual results
privately sent to parents and guardians.
When combined with other sources of information, including hospital data and
community characteristics, SHAPE will help provide our state with unprecedented
information to ensure that the most effective interventions and policy changes
are proposed and implemented in Georgia.
That is the true importance of our work with childhood obesity. Not every
overweight child has diabetes, but extra body fat makes insulin’s regulation of
blood glucose more difficult and therefore increases the risk of diabetes. With
a 300 percent increase in childhood obesity in the last 30 years, we have seen a
marked increase of diabetes in younger and younger people.
SHAPE will serve as an excellent, accurate measurement of where we are. But
insulin might tell us where we’re going.
Insulin is the key to regulating glucose in the blood. Glucose leaves the
bloodstream when used as fuel for activity. Too little activity and glucose
increases. Eat too much, or eat foods which digest into glucose too quickly, and
glucose increases. Either scenario forces the body to create more insulin. At
some point, this balancing act becomes too difficult for the body to manage and
Type II diabetes is the result.
At the Georgia Department of Public Health, a new and innovative pilot program
with employees will allow us to look more deeply into insulin levels as
indicators of future health issues. Soon, it is my hope that every American
learns and understands the simple facts about diabetes, insulin and what we
might learn from insulin levels.
We in the department will look at insulin. But I encourage you to look at what
you eat — and how much you move.
-Dr. Brenda Fitzgerald is commissioner of the Georgia Department of Public Health.
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