First Lady Michelle
Obama Launches Let's Move:
America's Move to Raise a Healthier Generation of Kids
America’s move to raise a healthier
generation of kids www.LetsMove.gov
9-Feb-2010: First Lady Michelle Obama today announced an
ambitious national goal of solving the challenge of childhood obesity within a
generation so that children born today will reach adulthood at a healthy weight
and unveiled a nationwide campaign – Let’s Move – to help achieve it.
The Let’s Move campaign will combat the epidemic of childhood
obesity through a comprehensive approach that builds on effective strategies,
and mobilizes public and private sector resources. Let’s Move will engage
every sector impacting the health of children to achieve the national goal, and
will provide schools, families and communities simple tools to help kids be more
active, eat better, and get healthy.
To support Let’s Move and facilitate and coordinate partnerships
with States, communities, and the non-profit and for-profit private sectors, the
nation’s leading children’s health foundations have come together to create a
new independent foundation – the Partnership for a Healthier America – which
will accelerate existing efforts addressing childhood obesity and facilitate new
commitments towards the national goal of solving childhood obesity within a
generation.
Almost a year ago, Mrs. Obama began a national conversation about the health
of America’s children when she broke ground on the White House Kitchen Garden
with students from Bancroft Elementary School in Washington, DC. Through
the garden, she began a discussion with kids about proper nutrition and the role
food plays in living a healthy life. That discussion grew into the Let’s
Move campaign announced today.
Over the past three decades, childhood obesity rates in America have tripled,
and today, nearly one in three children in America are overweight or obese.
One third of all children born in 2000 or later will suffer from diabetes at
some point in their lives; many others will face chronic obesity-related health
problems like heart disease, high blood pressure, cancer, and asthma. A recent
study put the health care costs of obesity-related diseases at $147 billion per
year. This epidemic also impacts the nation’s security, as obesity is now
one of the most common disqualifiers for military service.
“The physical and emotional health of an entire generation and the economic
health and security of our nation is at stake,” said Mrs. Obama. “This
isn’t the kind of problem that can be solved overnight, but with everyone
working together, it can be solved. So, let’s move.”
The First Lady launched the Let’s Move campaign at the White House where she
was joined by members of the President’s cabinet, including Agriculture
Secretary Vilsack, HHS Secretary Sebelius, Education Secretary Duncan, HUD
Secretary Donovan, Labor Secretary Solis, and Interior Secretary Salazar,
Surgeon General Regina Benjamin, Members of Congress, mayors from across the
nation and leaders from the media, medical, sports, entertainment, and business
communities who impact the health of children and want to be part of the
solution. Program participants included: Tiki Barber, NBC
correspondent and former NFL football player; Dr. Judith Palfrey, President of
the American Academy of Pediatrics; Will Allen, Founder and CEO of Growing
Power; Mayor Curtatone of Somerville, Massachusetts; Mayor Chip Johnson of
Hernando, Mississippi; and local students, including a student from DC’s
Bancroft elementary school, and members of the 2009 National Championship
Pee-Wee football team, the Watkins Hornets.
Let’s Move is comprehensive, collaborative, and community-oriented
and will include strategies to address the various factors that lead to
childhood obesity. It will foster collaboration among the leaders in
government, medicine and science, business, education, athletics, community
organizations and more. And it will take into account how life is really
lived in communities across the country – encouraging, supporting and pursuing
solutions that are tailored to children and families facing a wide range of
challenges and life circumstances.
President Barack Obama kicked off the launch by signing a Presidential
Memorandum creating the first ever Task Force on Childhood Obesity
which will include the DPC, Office of the First Lady, Interior, USDA, HHS,
Education, NEC and other agencies. Within 90 days, the Task Force will
conduct a review of every single program and policy relating to child nutrition
and physical activity and develop a national action plan that maximizes federal
resources and sets concrete benchmarks toward the First Lady’s national goal.
While the review is underway, Administration and public and private efforts
are already moving to combat obesity and reach the First Lady’s national
goal:
Helping Parents Make Healthy Family Choices
Parents play a key role in making healthy choices for their children and
teaching their children to make healthy choices for themselves. But in
today’s busy world, this isn’t always easy. So Let’s Move will offer
parents the tools, support and information they need to make healthier choices
for their families. The Administration, along with partners in the private
sector and medical community, will:
Empower Consumers: By the end of
this year, the Food and Drug Administration will begin working with retailers
and manufacturers to adopt new nutritionally sound and consumer friendly
front-of-package labeling. This will put us on a path towards 65 million
parents in America having easy access to the information needed to make healthy
choices for their children.
Already, the private sector is responding. Today,
the American Beverage Association announced that its member companies will
voluntarily put a clear, uniform, front-of-pack calorie label on all of their
cans, bottles, vending and fountain machines within two years. The label will
reflect total calories per container in containers up to 20oz. in size.
For containers greater than 20 oz., the label will reflect a 12 oz. serving
size. While more work remains to be done, this marks an important first
step in ensuring parents have the information they need to make healthier
choices
Provide Parents with a Rx for Healthier Living:
The American Academy of Pediatrics, in collaboration with the broader medical
community, will educate doctors and nurses across the country about obesity,
ensure they regularly monitor children’s BMI, provide counseling for healthy
eating early on, and, for the first time ever, will even write a prescription
for parents laying out the simple things they can do to increase healthy eating
and active play.
Major New Public Information Campaign:
Major media companies – including the Walt Disney Company, NBC, Universal and
Viacom – have committed to join the First Lady’s effort and increase public
awareness of the need to combat obesity through public service announcements
(PSAs), special programming, and marketing. The Ad Council, Warner Brothers and
Scholastic Media have also partnered with the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) to run PSAs featuring top professional athletes, Scholastic
Media’s Maya & Miguel, and Warner Brothers’ legendary Looney Tunes characters.
Next Generation Food Pyramid: To
help people make healthier food and physical activity choices, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture will revamp the famous food pyramid.
MyPyramid.gov is one of the most popular websites in the federal government, and
a 2.0 version of the Web site will offer consumers a host of tools to help them
put the Dietary Guidelines into practice.
Empower Change: USDA has created the
first-ever interactive database – the Food Environment Atlas – that maps healthy
food environments at the local level across the country. It will help
people identify the existence of food deserts, high incidences of diabetes, and
other conditions in their communities. This information can be used by
parents, educators, government and businesses to create change across the
country.
LetsMove.gov: To help
children parents, teachers, doctors, coaches, the non-profit and business
communities and others understand the epidemic of childhood obesity and take
steps to combat it, the Administration has launched a new “one-stop” shopping
website -- LetsMove.gov -- to provide helpful tips, step-by-step strategies for
parents, and regular updates on how the federal government is working with
partners to reach the national goal.
Serving Healthier Food in Schools
Many children consume as many as half of their daily calories at school.
As families work to ensure that kids eat right and have active play at home, we
also need to ensure our kids have access to healthy meals in their schools.
With more than 31 million children participating in the National School Lunch
Program and more than 11 million participating in the National School Breakfast
Program, good nutrition at school is more important than ever. Together
with the private sector and the non-profit community, we will take the following
steps to get healthier food in our nation’s schools:
Reauthorize the Child Nutrition Act: The
Administration is requesting an historic investment of an additional $10 billion
over ten years starting in 2011 to improve the quality of the National School
Lunch and Breakfast program, increase the number of kids participating, and
ensure schools have the resources they need to make program changes, including
training for school food service workers, upgraded kitchen equipment, and
additional funding for meal reimbursements. With this investment,
additional fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and low-fat dairy products will be
served in our school cafeterias and an additional one million students will be
served in the next five years.
Double the number of schools participating in the
Healthier US School Challenge: The Healthier US School Challenge
establishes rigorous standards for schools’ food quality, participation in meal
programs, physical activity, and nutrition education – the key components that
make for healthy and active kids – and provides recognition for schools that
meet these standards. Over the next school year, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, working with partners in schools and the private sector, will
double the number of schools that meet the Healthier US School Challenge and add
1,000 schools per year for two years after that.
We are bringing to the table key stakeholder groups that
have committed to work together to improve the nutritional quality of school
meals across the country.
New Commitments from Major School Food Suppliers:
School food suppliers are taking important first steps to help meet the
Healthier US School Challenge goal. Major school food suppliers including
Sodexho, Chartwells School Dining Services, and Aramark have voluntarily
committed to meet the Institute of Medicine’s recommendations within five years
to decrease the amount of sugar, fat and salt in school meals; increase whole
grains; and double the amount of produce they serve within 10 years. By
the end of the 2010-2011 school year, they have committed to quadruple the
number of the schools they serve that meet the Healthier US School Challenge.
School Nutrition Association: The School
Nutrition Association (SNA), which represents food service workers in more than
75% of the nation’s schools, has joined the Let’s Move campaign. Working with
other education partners, SNA has committed to increasing education and
awareness of the dangers of obesity among their members and the students they
serve, and ensuring that the nutrition programs in 10,000 schools meet the
Healthier US School Challenge standards over the next five years.
School Leadership: Working with
school food service providers and SNA, the National School Board Association,
the Council of Great City Schools and the American Association of School
Administrators Council have all embraced, and committed to meeting, the national
Let’s Move goal. The Council of Great City Schools has also has set a goal
of having every urban school meet the Healthier US Schools gold standard within
five years. The American Association of School Administrators has
committed to ensuring that an additional 2,000 schools meet the challenge over
the next two years. These combined efforts will touch 50 million students
and their families in every school district in America.
Accessing Healthy, Affordable Food
More than 23 million Americans, including 6.5 million children, live in
low-income urban and rural neighborhoods that are more than a mile from a
supermarket. These communities, where access to affordable, quality, and
nutritious foods is limited, are known as food deserts.
Lack of access is one reason why many children are not eating recommended levels
of fruits, vegetables, and whole grains. And food insecurity and hunger among
children is widespread. A recent USDA report showed that in 2008, an
estimated 49.1 million people, including 16.7 million children, lived in
households that experienced hunger multiple times throughout the year. The
Administration, through new federal investments and the creation of public
private partnerships, will:
Eliminate Food Deserts: As part of
the President’s proposed FY 2011 budget, the Administration announced the new
Healthy Food Financing Initiative – a partnership between the U.S. Departments
of Treasury, Agriculture and Health and Human Services that will invest $400
million a year to help bring grocery stores to underserved areas and help places
such as convenience stores and bodegas carry healthier food options.
Through these initiatives and private sector engagement, the Administration will
work to eliminate food deserts across the country within seven years.
Increase Farmers Markets: The President’s
2011 Budget proposes an additional $5 million investment in the Farmers Market
Promotion Program at the U.S. Department of Agriculture which provides grants to
establish, and improve access to, farmers markets.
Increasing Physical Activity Children need 60 minutes of active play each day. Yet, the
average American child spends more than 7.5 hours a day watching TV and movies,
using cell phones and computers, and playing video games, and only a third of
high school students get the recommended levels of physical activity.
Through public-private partnerships, and reforms of existing federal programs,
the Administration will address this imbalance by:
Expanding and Modernizing the President’s Physical
Fitness Challenge: In the coming weeks, the President will be
naming new members to the President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports,
housed at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The council
will be charged with increasing participation in the President’s Challenge and
with modernizing and expanding it, so that it is consistent with the latest
research and science.
Doubling the Number of Presidential Active
Lifestyle Awards: As part of the President’s Physical Fitness
Council, the President will challenge both children and adults to commit to
physical activity five days a week, for six weeks. As part of the First
Lady’s commitment to solve the problem of childhood obesity in a generation, the
Council will double the number of children in the 2010-2011 school year who earn
a “Presidential Active Lifestyle Award” for meeting this challenge.
Safe and Healthy Schools: The U.S.
Department of Education will be working with Congress on the creation of a Safe
and Healthy Schools fund as part of the reauthorization of the Elementary and
Secondary School Education Act this year. This fund will support schools
with comprehensive strategies to improve their school environment, including
efforts to get children physically active in and outside of school, and improve
the quality and availability of physical education.
Professional Sports: Professional
athletes from twelve leagues including the NFL, MLB, WNBA, and MLS have joined
the First Lady on the Let’s Move campaign and will promote “60 Minutes of Play a
Day” through sports clinics, public service announcements, and more to help
reach the national goal of solving the problem of childhood obesity in a
generation.
Partnership for a Healthier America
Core to the success of this initiative is the recognition that government
approaches alone will not solve this challenge. Achieving the goal will require
engaging in partnerships with States, communities, and the non-profit and
for-profit private sectors. To support this effort, several foundations are
coming together to organize and fund a new central foundation – the Partnership
for a Healthier America – to serve as a nonpartisan convener across the private,
non-profit and public sectors to accelerate existing efforts addressing
childhood obesity and to facilitate commitments towards the national goal of
solving childhood obesity within a generation. The Partnership for a
Healthier America is being created by a number of leading health care
foundations and childhood obesity non-profits, including the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation, The California Endowment, W.K. Kellogg Foundation, The Alliance for
Healthier Generation, Kaiser Permanente, and Nemours, and will seek to add new
members in the days and months ahead.