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Title: HEALTH PROMOTION: SOCIAL CHANGE AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY


1
HEALTH PROMOTION SOCIAL CHANGE AND PHYSICAL
ACTIVITY
  • John C. Peters, PhD
  • Nutrition Science Institute
  • The Procter Gamble Company

2
TODAY An Obesity Epidemic
Obesity is the health problem of the century.
Dr. Jeffrey Koplan, Director, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention
3
WHO Obesity Report
  • Global projections for obesity for the next
    decade are so serious that public health action
    is urgently required
  • It is necessary to develop new preventive public
    health strategies which affect the entire society
  • Obesity is todays principal neglected public
    health problem

4
US TRENDS IN OBESITY
  • Overweight BMI gt25
  • Adults 61 97M (gt20 yrs)
  • F 50 47M
  • M 59 50M
  • Obese BMI gt30
  • Adults 26 39.8M
  • F 25 23M
  • M 19 17M
  • 14 children adolescents

available at http//www.niddk.nih.gov/health/nutr
it
5
Available at www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpa/obesity/tre
nd/maps/slide
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GRAYING OF AMERICA
  • ? Number of older adults
  • Today 34M, 13, 18
  • 2030 70M, 20, 15
  • 5,574 Americans turn 65 each day
  • ? Number of minorities
  • 2000 16
  • 2030 25
  • 85 population
  • 2000 4.2 M
  • 2030 8.9 M

8
OVERWEIGHT OBESE BY AGE GROUPS
9
BMI
  • 33 congregate and home delivered meal
    participants have BMIs 22-27
  • 32 home delivered meal participants have BMIs
    lt22 (underweight)
  • 42 congregate meal participants have BMIs gt27
    (overweight)

Natl Eval ENP, 1993-1995 (Mathematica)
10
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
  • Multiple health benefits for older adults
  • ? muscle bone strength
  • ? lean muscle, ? body fat
  • Helps control weight
  • May ? symptoms depression anxiety

11
OVERWEIGHT EXERCISE
94-96 CSFII
12
MOBILITY LEISURE TIME PA NUTRITION PROGRAM
PARTICIPANTS
Natl Eval ENP, 1993-1995 (Mathematica)
13
FUNCTIONAL STATUS HDM Participants
  • 65 unable to perform gt1 ADLs or IADLs without
    assistance
  • 37 unable to walk without assistance
  • 64 unable to shop for groceries
  • On average, impaired in 2 ADLs 2 IADLs

Natl Eval ENP, 1993-1995 (Mathematica)
14
WHATS CAUSING THE OBESITY EPIDEMIC?
  • Biology
  • Physiology gone astray?
  • Environment
  • Is it the way we live?
  • Societal Values
  • Our underlying beliefs and values?

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BIOLOGY
  • Genes clearly affect body weight
  • understand the physiology of energy balance
  • Our genes can explain differences between people,
    but cannot explain the rapid increase in obesity
    in all groups over the past couple of decades
  • Environment must be playing a role in susceptible
    people

17
PIMA INDIANS
35.5
35
30.8
30
25.1
24.8
25
US
20
Mexico
BMI (kg/m2)
15
10
5
0
Men
Women
Adapted from Ravussin, et al., 1994
18
  • We have a mismatch between our physiology and our
    environment

19
Body Fat Mass
Environmental Pressures to Reduce Physical
Activity
EIn
EOut
Environmental Pressures to Eat
20
WHAT ARE THE CAUSES?
  • Biology
  • Physiology gone astray?
  • Environment
  • Is it the way we live?
  • Societal Values
  • Our underlying beliefs and values?

21
WHATS CAUSING THE PROBLEM?
  • Tendency to become fat is fostered by our
    American lifestyle
  • Lack of physical activity combined with
    abundant, ubiquitous, inexpensive, tasty,
    high-calorie food
  • 170,000 fast food restaurants
  • One chains goal lt4 min. from anywhere in US
  • 3 M soda vending machines
  • At supermarkets, schools, video stores, soccer
    fields, gas stations, etc.

22
What are the relative contributions of overeating
vs. physical inactivity in the etiology of
obesity?
  • Incomplete data, difficult to quantify separate
    components
  • Mostly descriptive, observational studies
  • Focus has been mostly on proximal factors

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WHAT FACTORS IN THE ENVIRONMENT PROMOTE ENERGY
INTAKE?
  • Portion size
  • High fat/energy dense foods
  • High glycemic index foods
  • Soft drinks
  • Sugar
  • High accessibility of food
  • Low cost of food
  • Great taste of food
  • Variety
  • Advertising of food

25
SERVING VS. PORTION SIZES
  • Serving size based on the USDA Food Guide
    Pyramid used on food labels
  • Portion size amount of a specific food an
    individual eats
  • Portion sizes vary
  • gender
  • activity level
  • age
  • appetite
  • where and when food is obtained and eaten

26
HOW DO THEY MATCH UP?
All medium servings
27
PORTION SIZES HAVE INCREASED OVER THE YEARS
2.3 oz
6.9 oz
6.5 oz
20 oz
1.1 oz
3.7 oz
FrenchFries
Soft Drink
Candy Bar
Nutrition Action, 2001.
28
IMPACT OF LARGER PORTIONS
  • Girls women drank 17 oz when served a large
    size soda only 9 oz when served a small.
  • On average, people ate 165 candy-coated chocolate
    bits when given a 2 lb bag 112 when given a 1
    lb bag.
  • People eat 50 more hedonistic foods, like
    candy, chips, crisps, popcorn, when they come in
    bigger packages.
  • With other foods (non-indulgent foods), the
    increase is usually 25.

B Wansink, Director, Food and Brand Research Lab
University of Illinois Champaign-Urbana
29
Energy Intake (kcal/day)Adults 20 years and over
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31
What Factors in the Environment Promote Low
Levels of Physical Activity?
  • Declining need for physical labor at work
  • Elimination of physical activity in schools
  • Reductions in physical activity required for
    daily living
  • Physical environment, transportation
  • Competition from attractive sedentary activities
  • Television, video/DVD, video/computer games,
    internet

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DECLINE IN EE DUE TO TECHNOLOGY (kcals.yr-1)
  • Female Male
  • Reliance on elevators / escalators 4160
    4485
  • Reliance on remote control 728 819
  • Decrease in work-related activity 13,000 13,000
  • 50 kcal per day
    17,888 18,304
  • Equivalent to 2.3 kg (5.1 lb) of fat mass

34
Traditional community design encourages physical
activity
35
Modern community design discourages physical
activity
36
NEIGHBORHOOD COMPARISON
  • Traditional development
  • Network
  • grid-like street pattern
  • many access points
  • Land use
  • high residential densities
  • mixture and proximity of use
  • Design
  • contiguous sidewalks
  • variation in housing size and design
  • Suburban development
  • Network
  • circuitous streets, cul-de-sacs
  • limited access points
  • Land use
  • large home lots, low density
  • segregated, clustered land use
  • Design
  • no or disconnected sidewalks
  • little variation in housing

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42
Daily Participation Physical Education in High
School
Boys
Girls
Percent
Source CDC, National Youth Risk Behavior Survey.
Year
43
DECREASED ACTIVITY IN SCHOOLS
  • Assume PE time ? from 50 to 30 mins. wk-1
    and recess time ? from 30 to 15 mins.
    day-1
  • Average energy cost of activity to be 6.0 METS
  • Children are active 50 of time
  • (6 - 2) METs x 45 kg x 20/60 60.0
    kcal.day-1
  • (6 - 2) METs x 45 kg x 7.5/60 22.5
    kcal.day-1
  • 82.5 kcal.day-1
  • Equivalent to 1.9 kg per school year (180
    days)

44
TRENDS OF PARTICIPATION IN LEISURE-TIME PHYSICAL
ACTIVITY BY ADULTS, NHIS
Percent
Years
CDC
Source Physical Activity and Health, A Report of
the Surgeon General, 1996
45
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46
Body Fat Mass
EIn
EOut
Palatable, low-cost, easily available foods
47
THE CAUSES OF OBESITY ARE ...
  • so manifold and so basic as to be inseparable
    from the way we live.
  • Margaret Talbot New America Foundation

48
WHAT ARE THE CAUSES?
  • Biology
  • Physiology gone astray?
  • Environment
  • Is it the way we live?
  • Societal Values
  • Our underlying beliefs and values?

49
OUR SOCIETY HAS ALWAYS ASPIRED TO
  • Have abundant, accessible, affordable food supply
  • Reduce amount of physical labor required for
    daily living
  • Increased leisure, freedom of choice
  • Have the good life

50
  • Our aspirational values are out of date in the
    environment we have built

51
SOCIAL / CULTURAL DRIVERS
  • Productivity -- provides the means to achieve
    the good life
  • Leads to increased demand for more technology to
    increase productivity
  • Leads to increased pace of life and time pressure
  • Leads to increased demand for convenience
  • convenience/comfort foods
  • less physical activity
  • more sedentary leisure/entertainment

52
THE SEDENTARY LIFE
  • Major cause of death in the US
  • Sedentary Death Syndrome (SeDS) 1 of top 3
    causes of all-cause mortality in US
  • 15 of 1.6 million chronic health conditions due
    to sedentary lifestyle alone

source Presidents Council on Physical Fitness
Sports. Series 3, No. 16
53
COSTS OF SEDENTARY LIFESTYLE
  • Physical inactivity accounts for 15 of US
    health care budget
  • CVD 298.2B
  • Type 2 Diabetes 98B
  • 30 reduction achieved by those walking 2.5 hr/wk
  • 15 lb. weight loss reduces risk by 60 saves
    US health system 58B/yr

54
ECONOMIC BENEFITS OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
  • In 14 yr study, unfit employees had twice the
    injury cost as fit employees (Cady 1985)
  • Physically active employees spent 217 per person
    less on medical claims had 21 hr / person less
    of sick time (Gettman 1986)
  • A zero increase in medical costs was reported for
    company with fitness program 35 increase in
    medical cost for one with no fitness program
    (Shepard 1992)

55
WHAT DO WE NEED TO DO?
  • Recognize that the environment is a reflection
    of our collective values as a society
  • What are updated values for the new millennium?
  • How can we build demand for healthy behaviors and
    a healthier environment?

56
ELEMENTS OF SUCCESSFUL SOCIAL CHANGE
  • A Crisis
  • Science Base
  • Economics
  • Spark Plugs
  • Coalition Building
  • Advocacy
  • Government Intervention
  • Mass Communication
  • Change Environment/Policy
  • A Plan

57
WHERE TO BEGIN?
  • Explore most effective way to define the crisis
  • Develop quantitative understanding of the energy
    imbalance driving the trend
  • Develop plan for changing societal values
    long-termwhat is the new value equation?
  • Must make economic sense
  • Look for sustainability and incentives
  • Build cognitive skills into education curriculum

58
WHERE TO BEGIN?
  • Look for ways to motivate change within existing
    value structure, i.e., look for opportunities
    that dont compete with current values
  • Pilot innovative approaches that work within
    existing values, or that build new values (local,
    regional, national)

59
SUMMARY
  • We can no longer rely on biology (instinct) to
    maintain energy balance
  • We need to provide the knowledge, skills,
    opportunity and reinforcement of healthy
    behaviors to prevent obesity (intellect)
  • This will require coordinated effort among all
    sectors of societydriving toward a new set of
    social valueswe need to create demand for
    healthy behaviors and a healthy environment

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