Obesity weighs down progress in index of youth well-being

From the following report. you can see that the

Well-being of young people in the USA has improved only marginally since 1975, according to a report by the private Foundation for Child Development. Using government data, the foundation found that health, education and family data for children had improved only about 5%.

Year % values met
1975 100.00
1980 101.18
1985 95.77
1990 96.04
1995 95.03
2000 102.79
2004 105.19{+1}


1-Most values for 2004 based on projections.
Source: 2005 Index of Child Well-Being

My observation is that, American parent's are busy at work. Most of the schools.. in fact all the schools are without canteen.

Therefore, they grown up with junk food for lunch. That is the main reason for the Obesity rate increase from 5% in 1975 to 16.7% in 2004.


This is really alarming. So love your kid's, Let them have good food.. healthy food, ensure that they have Great Health




Obesity weighs down progress in index of youth well-being
By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY

Despite drops in drug, alcohol and tobacco use, lower teen birth rates and lower rates of juvenile crime, the overall well-being of young people is barely better than it was nearly 30 years ago.

And childhood obesity is a big factor, according to a report released today by a New York-based philanthropic foundation.

Researchers at Duke University found that despite progress in several key areas, a few important indicators, such as obesity and childhood poverty, have worsened.

In the meantime, the percentage of young adults with a bachelor's degree rose only marginally from 1975 to 2003.

The latest version of the annual Index of Child Well-Being uses government data from 2003 to track 28 indicators, some of which were projected to 2004.

Kenneth Land, a professor of demographic studies at Duke and the developer of the index, says more attentive parenting by baby boomers probably has helped reduce risk factors such as juvenile crime and teen drug, alcohol and tobacco use.

"I think it's a reasonable hypothesis to say (parents) have been much more attentive to child-rearing than perhaps their predecessors were," he says.

Also, he says, young people today are more inclined to be team-oriented than their parents were and more likely to accept authority, so they're less likely to rebel by taking drugs or committing crimes.

But he warns that two important factors that kept crime down in the 1990s — a thriving national economy and a federal program that put thousands of police officers on the streets — can't be taken for granted anymore.

Childhood obesity, which more than tripled from 1975 to 2004, also has offset other gains, he says. The rate of childhood obesity rose from just more than 5% to a projected 16.7%.

And education is "one of the areas where we still have work to do," says Fasaha Traylor, senior program officer for the Foundation for Child Development, which sponsors the annual index.

"The United States can do better, and it should do better."

Though stopping short of criticizing schools for the small gains, Traylor says education "has been surprisingly resistant" to improvement; basic skills and the percentage of young people holding bachelor's degrees rose only slightly.

Traylor recommends investing more in early-childhood programs and coordinating them with those in elementary school. Such efforts "will pay dividends down the road." Read More.

USATODAY.com - Obesity weighs down progress in index of youth well-being

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