Archive for January, 2012
U.S. Obesity Rates Plateau (at a High Level); Rates Still Higher in Blacks, Latinos
0The prevalence of obesity in the U.S. largely leveled off over the last decade, even as some individual groups, such as boys from ages 6 to 19, saw increases, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Bloomberg reports.
Obesity rates in adults rose slightly to 35.7% from 30.5% between 1999 and 2010, compared with rates that nearly doubled the two previous decades.
Overall, a third of the population—78 million adults and 12.5 million children—were obese in 2009- 2010.
According to the story:
“The fact that prevalence rates are reaching a plateau is good news, but by no means are we at the end of the epidemic,” said David Ludwig, a pediatric endocrinologist and director of the New Balance Foundation Obesity Prevention Center at Children’s Hospital Boston. “Unless we see declining rates of obesity the impact on society will continue to mount for many years to come. The plateau is at an unacceptably high level.”
Also, a Medscape report form the same study indicates that racial differences also were striking.
Black and Hispanic children and adolescents had higher obesity rates (24.3% and 21.2%) than white children (14%).
Study: Health Coaches Key to Addressing Latino Lifestyle Issues
1Editor’s Note: This is a 20-part series featuring new research briefs on Latino childhood obesity, nutrition, physical activity and more by the 20 grantees of Salud America! Part 5 is Dr. Alexy Arauz Boudreau. Find all briefs here.
Dr. Alexy Arauz Boudreau
“A Family Approach to Addressing Lifestyle Decisions Regarding Obesity and Diabetes”
In her Salud America! pilot research project, Dr. Alexy Arauz Boudreau of Massachusetts General Hospital tested the feasibility and effectiveness of a family-centered approach consisting of interactive group classes followed by six months of health coaching.
The five-session group classes, known as Power-Up, are for Latino families with obese children. Health coaching is delivered by a Latina medical assistant who knows the community, using a coaching style modeled on a successful adult diabetes program, but tailored to include the child and family and focused on age-appropriate opportunities and solutions.
Key preliminary findings include:
- group classes and health coaching can be well-attended by Latinos;
- in the intervention’s group classes, children and parents are assimilating nutritional knowledge; and
- obese Latino children are at higher risk for cardiovascular disease and diabetes.
Results indicate that health coaches are key to addressing lifestyle diseases among Latino populations at high risk of obesity. Addressing reimbursement for health coaching services is a critical step in transforming the medical system to a more efficient and successful system.
Read more here.
Salud America! is an RWJF national program directed by the Institute for Health Promotion Research at The UT Health Science Center at San Antonio, the team behind SaludToday.
Study: Parenting Tips Positively Affect Latino Parents’ Feeding Attitudes, Practices
0Editor’s Note: This is a 20-part series featuring new research briefs on Latino childhood obesity, nutrition, physical activity and more by the 20 grantees of Salud America! Part 4 is Dr. Harris Huberman. Find all briefs here.
Dr. Harris Huberman
“Using Parenting Newsletters to Reduce Young Latino Children’s Weight”
In his Salud America! pilot research project, Dr. Harris Huberman of SUNY Downstate Medical Center in New York tested a low-cost parenting intervention to reduce rates of overweight and obesity in Latino children during the first three years of life.
The intervention features a series of age-paced parenting newsletters called Primeros Pasos in Spanish or Building Blocks in English (PP/BB), which are mailed monthly to families beginning at the birth of a child through age 3.
Key preliminary findings include:
- the PP/BB intervention reduced overweight during the first years of life; and
- the PP/BB intervention was associated with reduced rate of overweight through age 3.
A PP/BB intervention beginning in a child’s infancy, that utilizes culturally tailored parenting newsletters to influence parents’ feeding attitudes and practices, can have a beneficial impact in reducing overweight in Latino children as they reach preschool age.
This study suggests that preventive parenting approaches beginning in very early childhood—especially among Latinos—should be an element of broader obesity prevention strategies.
Read more here.
Salud America! is an RWJF national program directed by the Institute for Health Promotion Research at The UT Health Science Center at San Antonio, the team behind SaludToday.
Study: ‘Fit for the Lord’—How Churches Can Join Battle against Obesity
0Editor’s Note: This is a 20-part series featuring new research briefs on Latino childhood obesity, nutrition, physical activity and more by the 20 grantees of Salud America! Part 1 is Dr. Meizi He. Find all briefs here.
Dr. Meizi He
“Latino Faith-Based Communities’ Perspective on Childhood Obesity”
In her Salud America! pilot research project, Dr. Meizi He of the University of Texas at San Antonio conducted interviews and focus groups among church leaders and congregations to gather their insights on childhood obesity.
Key preliminary findings include:
- Latino church leaders and members perceived a link between faith and health;
- obesity-prevention efforts should be culturally sensitive; and
- there are perceived financial, environmental, cultural and lifestyle barriers to obesity-prevention programs in faith-based settings.
Latino faith-based leaders are aware of and willing to address childhood obesity among their congregations. The preliminary results of this study highlight the need for obesity prevention among Latino children and reveal the strong potential of a faith-based community as a venue and infrastructure for implementing effective obesity-prevention strategies.
Read more here. Watch a KENS-TV report about the study:
Salud America! is an RWJF national program directed by the Institute for Health Promotion Research at The UT Health Science Center at San Antonio, the team behind SaludToday.
Viewpoint: The Growing Obesity Epidemic among Latino Youth
0SaludToday Guest Blogger: Dr. Amelie G. Ramirez

Dr. Amelie G. Ramirez directs Salud America! and the Institute for Health Promotion Research at The UT Health Science Center at San Antonio, the team behind SaludToday.
Obesity causes more than 15 percent of this country’s preventable deaths—more than alcohol, toxins, care accidents, gun-related deaths, drug abuse and STDs combined—and it causes a huge financial strain on the health care system. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), obesity affects approximately 34 percent of adults and 17 percent of children in the U.S. The agency recently estimated the costs of obesity at almost $150 billion per year.
The obesity statistics for young Latinos are particularly frightening. Mexican-American children ages 2 to 19 are more likely to be obese or overweight (40.8 percent) than white (31.9 percent) and African-American (30 percent) children. Among preschoolers, nearly one out of every four Latinos is overweight. Studies show that Latino children’s diets are less healthy, their access to healthy foods is more limited, they are less active in organized sports and they watch more TV.
But I don’t even need these statistics. All I have to do is visit my grandchild’s school, see Latino families shopping in stores or look outside at empty playgrounds. You and I can “see” the childhood obesity epidemic in predominantly Latino regions.
Across the nation, half of Latinos born today will develop diabetes. This disturbing statistic sometimes causes me to wonder if this will be the first generation where parents outlive their children. We can’t afford to let that happen.
That’s why efforts to reduce and prevent childhood obesity are so critically important, and that’s why Salud America!, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) Research Network to Prevent Obesity among Latino Children, created a national network of more than 1,800 researchers, community leaders, policymakers and other stakeholders. The network works to increase the number of researchers and advocates seeking environmental and policy solutions to address Latino childhood obesity.
In December 2011, Salud America! unveiled three major research briefs examining current evidence on Latino childhood obesity issues: the availability of healthy, affordable foods, opportunities for physical activity and the impact of food marketing on diets. These briefs can help policymakers make critical decisions in crafting policies and allocating resources to address the epidemic, and they are designed to have widespread applicability to Latino childhood obesity advocacy organizations.
Also in December, 20 Salud America! pilot research grantees unveiled individual research briefs full of outcomes and implications for policy on Latino childhood obesity. One grantee found that, in examining body image perceptions among Latinos along the Texas-Mexico border, 32 percent of children believed they were overweight, but only 15 percent of parents reported seeing their children as overweight. Another grantee project demonstrated that small, independently owned restaurants in low-income Latino communities can help improve local nutrition environments by using menu labeling. Another project found that school district compliance with physical education policies may be an important determinant of Latino children’s fitness status. These grantees are models of “what’s working” to prevent obesity.
I urge you to join Salud America!. I also urge you to watch the below dramatic Latino childhood obesity video and use it as a “discussion starter” at school board meetings or community meetings about childhood obesity. You can also contact your local, state and federal leaders to encourage actions to reduce Latino childhood obesity and support healthier communities.
New research on this critical health issue will be presented during an expert panel, Mechanisms and Prevention of Obesity and Obesity-Related Diseases, at the annual conference of The Academy of Medicine, Engineering & Science of Texas on Jan. 13, 2012, in Houston. This panel is part of a conference session entitled The Obesity Epidemic that will include a keynote presentation by Dr. William H. Dietz, Director, Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
In the end, it is important to remember just how complicated the issue of childhood obesity is for Latinos and to know that efforts to solve this issue must attack the epidemic on every front; from nutrition to physical activity to media and marketing.
We each need to do our part to ensure that we’re not the first generation of parents to outlive our children.
VIDEO: Quality P.E. as a Solution to Child Obesity
0The childhood obesity epidemic in America is a major problem.
Over the past three decades, childhood obesity rates in America have tripled; and nearly one third of children in America are now overweight or obese.
This video from SPARK San Diego focuses on one of the solutions—getting kids moving in school—and explains why quality physical education (P.E.) can play such an important role in ending this epidemic:
Dr. Amelie Ramirez Named to Influential Board of Directors
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Dr. Amelie G. Ramirez directs the Institute for Health Promotion Research at The UT Health Science Center at San Antonio, the team behind SaludToday.
Dr. Amelie G. Ramirez, director of the Institute for Health Promotion Research at The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, the team behind SaludToday, has been elected to the board of directors for C-Change, a national organization that aims to leverage the expertise of leaders from government, business and nonprofit sectors of society to eliminate cancer as a major health problem as soon as possible.
Founded in 1998, C-Change’s approaches cancer as a societal burden that everyone bears the responsibility for addressing.
C-Change’s 150 members identify opportunities for collective action and apply the group’s unique strength—the collective expertise and resources of leaders from the three sectors of society—to accelerate action to end cancer.
The group’s 22-member board of directors is elected to staggered three-year terms by a vote of the entire C-Change membership, including former President George H.W. Bush, cyclist Lance Armstrong, TV personalities Larry King and Paula Zahn, former U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop, National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins and more.
Ramirez will serve from Jan. 1, 2012, to 2015.
“I am honored by this tremendous distinction from some of the key leaders in our nation’s fight against cancer,” Dr. Ramirez said. “I’m excited to be able to bring to the group my focus on the health and quality of life of disadvantaged populations, especially underserved Latinos.”
Dr. Ramirez has directed many research programs focused on human and organizational communication to reduce Latino cancer health disparities in cancer risk factors, clinical trial accrual and healthy lifestyles. Her projects have led to unique health communication models and interventions that have contributed to reduced Latino cancer rates and increased cancer screening among Latinos. She also is associate director of health disparities and the Max and Minnie Tomerlin Voelcker Endowed Chair in Cancer Healthcare Disparities and Outreach at the Cancer Therapy & Research Center (CTRC), the Health Science Center’s National Cancer Institute-designated Cancer Center. She also is a board member for Susan G. Komen for the Cure, the Lance Armstrong Foundation and the Avon Foundation for Women.
See a list of all C-Change board members here and overall members here.












