dcsimg
Skip Navigation
Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans Banner


Get Active healthfinder.gov - Your Source for Reliable Health Information Send a personalized e-card to friends and family

Be Active Your Way Blog

Enjoying the Summer Months - Indoors and Out

The summer months are upon us! Take advantage of the extra hours of sunshine to get outdoors and be physically active with your friends, coworkers, and family. When heading outside for activity and fun in the sun this month, always remember to grab your sunscreen and a reusable water bottle to protect your skin from the summer sun and to keep your body hydrated.

This July, you'll hear from:

How are you or your organization enjoying the great outdoors this month? E-mail us at physicalactivityguidelines@hhs.gov if you would like to contribute a blog post!

Celebrating Physical Fitness for All

by PCFSN May 30, 2013

Written by: J. Nadine Gracia, MD, MSCE; Deputy Assistant Secretary for Minority Health

 

Cross-posted from the President's Council on Fitness, Sports and Nutrition blog

 

Fitness is a word that means something different to everyone.  For some, it’s a necessity.  A prerequisite for health and wellbeing.  For others, it’s a journey.  A work in progress.  An aspiration.  An opportunity.

 

For me, fitness is exhilaration: the rush of bursting from the blocks at the start of a 200m race; the thrill of sprinting down a basketball court in the final seconds of the fourth quarter.  Sports, I found as a shy teenager – and as one of the few students of color at my high school – was a means of expressing myself that often seemed truer than anything else, and an outlet that opened up so many more doors of opportunity.  As an athlete, I learned lessons about leadership, teamwork, and perseverance that remain with me to this day.

 

But committing to physical fitness doesn’t have to mean running laps on a track, stepping onto a basketball court, or even joining a gym.  It doesn’t have to involve fancy equipment or expensive gear.  And it doesn’t mean winning races or setting records.  Physical fitness, as I have told kids and parents in my work as a pediatrician, is for everyone.  No matter what you look like, where you come from, or what your means, you can get active and get moving.  You can make physical activity a way of life.  You can improve your health, and jumpstart a better future. 

 

In the face of our country’s obesity epidemic, it is more important than ever that we inspire kids and families to make physical fitness a lifelong habit.  Perhaps more than any other health issue, obesity provides a clear example of the racial and ethnic health disparities that have been so costly for communities of color and for our country as a whole.  Minorities are far more likely than the rest of the population to be overweight and obese – and to suffer from related conditions, including diabetes and heart disease. Studies show that minority adults are less likely to be physically active.  Students of color are less likely to attend physical education classes on a regular basis.

 

Even as the Affordable Care Act is reducing health disparities by making health care more affordable, strengthening access to quality care, and promoting prevention and wellness, we know that minorities face many more barriers to health and fitness.  They also face challenges in many of the places where they live, work, learn, and play – places where the social determinants of health are stacked against our most vulnerable and underserved communities.  I heard the stories and worries of the parents of my patients as they told me that their neighborhoods and playgrounds weren’t safe for their kids to play in. 

 

But while these issues are complicated, they are not impossible to overcome.  That is why, under the leadership of First Lady Michelle Obama, our administration has declared an ambitious goal: solving childhood obesity within a generation. 

 

The First Lady’s Let’s Move! campaign is bringing together community leaders, elected officials, educators, health professionals, faith leaders, business leaders, parents, and even kids themselves to bring an end to childhood obesity. 

 

As schools are stepping up to serve healthier food in their cafeterias, and businesses are working to ensure that more Americans have access to healthy food, elected officials, faith-based organizations, and community groups are finding ways to promote physical activity in their communities.  And with the recent launch of the Let’s Move! Active Schools initiative, we are working to bring physical activity back to schools across the nation – because there is no better place to get kids moving, and no better way to inspire them to be physically active for a lifetime. 

 

Already, we are seeing communities and states make great strides in finding new ways to help kids get healthy.  But there remains so much more work to be done.  In the movement to bring physical activity into all our lives, and raise healthier generations in all our communities, there are many more opportunities yet.  To learn more and join in, visit www.LetsMove.gov and www.Fitness.gov

Announcing NEW Healthy People eLearning Lesson

by ODPHP March 26, 2013

Changing our policies, systems, and environment plays an important role in improving health. Earn free continuing education credit for learning how one community is implementing and evaluating a system-wide approach to reducing childhood obesity in this first-ever Healthy People eLearning lesson:

Defining Success in a Systems Approach: The San Diego County Childhood Obesity Initiative

You can earn free continuing education credit while learning about:

  • Healthy People 2020 and the Leading Health Indicators (LHI), particularly the LHI topic of Nutrition, Physical Activity, & Obesity;
  • Determinants of childhood obesity;
  • Processes involved in collective impact, or large-scale social change; and
  • Measures to evaluate policy, system, and environmental change related to nutrition and physical activity.

After the lesson, you're invited to join the Healthy People eLearning LinkedIn subgroup, to problem-solve and collaborate around questions from the lesson.

What are you waiting for? Take the lesson today.


Tags: , , ,

Blog Announcements

COMING SOON! Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans Midcourse Report

by ODPHP March 6, 2013

We know childhood and adolescence is a period when regular physical activity is critical for healthy growth and development, but today America's youth are less active than ever before.

This Friday, the Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (ODPHP) and the President's Council on Fitness, Sports, & Nutrition (PCFSN) will release the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans Midcourse Report: Strategies to Increase Physical Activity Among Youth at the Partnership for a Healthier America Summit in Washington, D.C.

Friday, March 8, 2013 9:45 - 11:00 AM EST

Burnham Room | Grand Hyatt Hotel | Washington, DC

The Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans (PAG) Midcourse Report comes five years after the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) published the first-ever PAG in 2008, describing the types and amounts of physical activity Americans ages 6 years and older need for overall health.

The PAG Midcourse Report builds on the Guidelines by highlighting intervention strategies for increasing physical activity in youth ages 3 to 17 years, identified in the current literature using a review-of-reviews approach.

The report provides implementation and research recommendations for leaders within five key settings that provide opportunities for youth to be active for 60 minutes or more each day:

  • School
  • Preschool and childcare
  • Community
  • Family and home
  • Primary health care

Download the PAG Midcourse Report and other materials at www.health.gov/PAGuidelines/Midcourse.

What are you doing in your home, school, organization or community to help kids be more active? We invite you to share your experiences and ideas.

Skip Navigation

RecentComments

Comment RSS

HHS | Accessibility | Privacy Policy | Freedom of Information Act | Disclaimer | Contact Us

This page last updated on: 11/04/2009

Content for this site is maintained by the
Office of Disease Prevention & Health Promotion, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Link to U.S. Department of Health and Human Services - www.hhs.gov