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Do Georgia's Child Obesity Ads Go Too Far?

Georgia Obesity Ad

By DAVID CRARY   05/ 1/11 10:00 AM ET   AP

-- The images are striking: Overweight boys and girls staring somberly from billboards and online videos, real-life embodiments of the blunt messages alongside.

"Chubby kids may not outlive their parents," for example. Or: "Big bones didn't make me this way. Big meals did."

The ads – part of a new "Stop Child Obesity" campaign in Georgia – won some enthusiastic praise for their attention-grabbing tactics. But they also have outraged parents, activists and academics who feel the result is more stigma for an already beleaguered and bullied group of children.

"Billboards depicting fat kids are extraordinarily harmful to the very kids they are supposedly trying to help," said the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance, which called for the billboards' removal.

The Georgia Children's Health Alliance, which created the ads, said they were necessary to jar parents of obese kids out of a state of denial that their children had a problem.

The furor reflects a broader nationwide phenomenon as states, cities and the White House itself – led by first lady Michelle Obama – expand efforts to curb obesity. For all the public support of these efforts, there's also a vocal and passionate corps of skeptics and critics worried that widespread discrimination toward the overweight and obese will only increase.

"Stigma is not an effective motivator," said Rebecca Puhl, a Yale University psychologist who is a leading expert on weight discrimination. "Whether children or adults, if they are teased or stigmatized, they're much more likely to engage in unhealthy eating and avoidance of physical activity."

Research by Puhl and her colleagues at Yale's Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity suggests that weight discrimination is pervasive – at schools, in the workplace, in the media, among health care providers. Yet efforts to combat it frequently founder: Only one state, Michigan, outlaws weight discrimination, and the anti-bullying policies proliferating in schools often lack specific content related to teasing of overweight children.

The spotlight on obesity intensified last year when Michelle Obama unveiled her national public awareness campaign, "Let's Move." Its goal, she said, was to eliminate childhood obesity within a generation by helping parents make better food choices, serving healthier food in schools, and encouraging children to exercise more.

Many aspects of "Let's Move" won near-universal praise. But activists in the fat-acceptance movement and experts who espouse a "health at every size" approach were upset that the campaign encouraged the monitoring of children's body mass index, or BMI, and thus might contribute to stigmatization of heavier kids.

"The idea of a BMI report card is horrible," said Paul Ernsberger a professor in the nutrition department at Case Western Reserve University's School of Medicine in Cleveland.

"To declare we're going to eliminate childhood obesity – that's actually a very stigmatizing thing to say," Ernsberger said. "The overweight child hears that and thinks, `They wish I wasn't here.'"

Linda Bacon, a nutrition professor at City College of San Francisco, is the author of "Health At Every Size" – a manifesto for a movement stressing a healthy lifestyle rather than weight control. She said the focus by "Let's Move" on BMI was of dubious medical value and posed potential problems for kids at all weight levels.

"It's done much more damage than good," Bacon said. "The larger kids feel bad about themselves, and the thinner kids feel it doesn't matter whether they exercise or eat well."

Deb Lemire, president of the Association for Size Diversity and Health, credited Michelle Obama with good intentions and commended various nutrition-related aspects of "Let's Move." But she said the emphasis on weight risked worsening the problems of teasing and bullying.

"The message that gets to the kids is, `There really is something wrong with me,'" said Lemire, of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. "We're saying we love you, we want you to have wonderful lives and be successful, but right now you're just not good enough."

The first lady's press office declined to respond in detail to the criticism, but defended "Let's Move."

"There will always be critics, but our approach is comprehensive, nurturing and working, with success already seen across the country," the office said in an e-mail.

There's no question that "Let's Move" has broad, high-powered backing, from groups such as the American Academy of Pediatrics. Its supporters note that one in three American children are overweight or obese, putting them at higher risk of serious health problems while billions of dollars are spent yearly treating obesity-related conditions.

Dr. Sandra Hassink, who chairs the pediatrics academy's obesity work group, said she witnesses the toll of weight-based bullying on a daily basis at her clinic at the A.I. duPont Hospital for Children in Wilmington, Del.

However, she defended the use of BMI as a screening mechanism.

"We know that elevated BMI places you at elevated risk of health problems," she said. "It's a screening tool to start a conversation with a child and family about health behavior that will reduce that risk."

Weight loss doesn't necessarily need to be the overriding goal in every case, she suggested, but it can be a vital part of countering diabetes, liver disease, sleep apnea and other obesity-related problems.

Critics of "Let's Move" say it could have struck a more positive tone about the diversity of body sizes and the possibility of being both large and healthy simultaneously.

"Regardless of her intentions, the first lady is making things worse," said San Francisco attorney Sondra Solovay, who teaches and writes about weight-based discrimination.

"I invite her to talk to fat adults who have experienced the hatred and discrimination firsthand," Solovay said, "and ask them how this program would have impacted them as kids."

Several local and state anti-obesity initiatives also have drawn fire from weight-discrimination watchdogs – notably Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer's recent proposal to levy a $50 fee on state Medicaid recipients who are obese and don't follow a doctor-supervised slimming regimen.

"This proposal does nothing to improve public health, and only perpetuates further stigma toward thousands of individuals whose quality of life is already reduced because of prejudice," Puhl wrote in her blog on Medscape.com.

One form of such prejudice is harassment at school. Peggy Howell, spokeswoman for the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance, protested when members of Congress recently introduced a bill that addressed bullying based on race, ethnicity, gender, disability, sexual orientation and religion, but made no mention of body size.

"Why are weight and height missing?" Howell asked. "Multiple studies indicate that fat children are the group being most bullied."

Puhl says too little attention is paid to such bullying.

"Youth who are obese cannot conceal their weight – their stigma is very visible," she said. "And yet their voices are not being heard. They are so vulnerable to victimization, with such devastating consequences."

Indeed, weight-related bullying is being cited by family members as a possible factor in the decision of two 14-year-old Minnesota girls to commit suicide together on April 16.

Puhl, who has studied weight discrimination for more than a decade, was lead author of a 2007 study of overweight children that concluded their quality of life, due to stigmatization by peers, was comparable to that of people with cancer.

She also has examined how obese people are portrayed in ads, news reports, movies and TV shows. Too often, says Puhl, they are depicted in needlessly negative ways – slouching on a sofa, eating junk food.

"We need to be sure we are fighting obesity, not obese people," she says.

Among other initiatives, the Rudd Center has compiled a gallery of photographs portraying obese individuals "in ways that are positive and non-stereotypical" – strolling outdoors, shopping for fresh produce.

Puhl says her research indicates Americans would support legislation to prohibit weight discrimination, particularly in the workplace. Yet only Michigan and a handful of cities, including San Francisco and Santa Cruz, Calif., have such laws in place.

There's been little serious discussion in Congress or most legislatures about following Michigan's example by outlawing weight discrimination at the federal or state level. A bill introduced several times in Massachusetts has failed to advance; a similar proposal died in Nevada's legislature this year after employers objected.

Michigan's law, enacted in 1976, has resulted in only a handful of weight-related complaints each year, according to Michigan State University human resources professor Mark Roehling. He says many overweight workers may be hesitant to pursue legal remedies even if they do feel discriminated against.

One of the few high-profile lawsuits in Michigan involves two former waitresses who claim Hooters fired them in 2009 because they weren't sufficiently slim. Hooters officials say the state law shouldn't apply because the appearance of their waitresses was a legitimate concern. The case remains unresolved.

Meanwhile, fat-acceptance activists continue to struggle against what they perceive as bias – on matters such as airline seating and seatbelt standards that don't account for extra-large people.

Marilyn Wann, San Francisco-based author of the book "FAT!SO?," says she's proud to call herself fat, and objects to the terms "overweight" and "obese."

She became an activist partly because she was unable to buy affordable health insurance, and is grateful that the Obama-backed health care overhaul now enables her to get coverage. But she wishes the White House would do more to counter weight bias.

"I had a painful childhood, and it would be worse now because weight stigma has increased," she said. "It would be amazing if federal government took a stand against weight discrimination."

Hassink, the Delaware pediatrician, said obesity and weight discrimination should both be combatted firmly and compassionately.

"The environment is pretty tough for people struggling with their weight," Hassink said. "But we need to have the conversation. We're all in this together."

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-- The images are striking: Overweight boys and girls staring somberly from billboards and online videos, real-life embodiments of the blunt messages alongside. "Chubby kids may not outlive their pa...
-- The images are striking: Overweight boys and girls staring somberly from billboards and online videos, real-life embodiments of the blunt messages alongside. "Chubby kids may not outlive their pa...
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07:26 PM on 06/22/2011
"Do Georgia's Anti-Obesity Ads Go Too Far?" Imagine the Chrsitian Right conducting a similar campaign to inspire gay youth to seek help to change their "evil" ways and you'll have your answer.
11:14 AM on 05/06/2011
I can understand efforts to remove stigmas associated with certain conditions, exempli gratia, mental health disorders. I certainly can find no excuse for bullying, but c'mon a "fat acceptance movement?" If the ads stated that "Smoking Kills," who'd bat an eye? Fact is, obesity - and its attendant deliterious conditions - kills, period.

Our increasing use of chemicals is probably only compounding the crisis. Case in point: there are something like 14 ingredients in a McDonald's egg.

There's a link on my website to a documentary coming out soon that should be of interest to any one who read this article. Check it at: http://jeffbacen.com/2011/04/28/forks-over-knives/
07:11 AM on 05/06/2011
To quote the ad displayed at the start of the article...

"Childhood obesity has increased by 300% in the last thirty years."

"Thirty years" means that this trending observation is based on evidence beginning in 1981. Let's see what entered the American lexicon, in the years leading up to 1981, that may have led to this expansion in childhood obesity (pun intended). Let's jump back another 30 years, to 1951. Merriam Webster, for the first time, includes "fast food".

Four years later, in 1955, Ray Kroc opens his first McDonald's in Des Plaines, Illinois. Ten years later, in 1965, McDonald's is listed on the public stock markets. According to reference•com there are now 13,000 McDonald's in the United States, and 17,000 more in foreign countries.

13,000 / 50 = 260 McDonald's per state. That's just the McDonald's chain.

McDonald's, and the other fast food chains, are not to blame for these childhood obesity statistics. But they are, without a doubt, the cheap fuel, that helps to fuel the crisis. The parents of America need to understand that "fast" food, fueling their kids regularly, will make them look the children on those billboards.

Banning those billboards is tantamount to "enablement". If America goes down the path of 'we can't show pictures of obese children in campaigns to alleviate the obesity crisis', then game over, Rush Limbaugh, and the GOP, will have their utopian "United States of Gluttony and Sloth".

Bottom line? America's childhood obesity crisis is Rush Limbaugh's fault.
07:38 AM on 05/06/2011
Oops! Should have read... The parents of America need to understand that "fast" food, fueling their kids regularly, will make them look [like] the children on those billboards.

I hate when the words in your head don't make it to the keyboard.
07:40 AM on 05/06/2011
I'm sure that "dittoheads" scoff at the idea that their "Maha Rushie" is such a big contributor to the childhood obesity crisis, through "enablement". But compare this typical, GOP flavored idiocy, to the wisdom of the First Lady's "Let's Move" initiative designed to influence children.

Rush's story goes something like this. His doctor, was "stunned" by his stellar stress test results, and said to Rush, "It's not possible because you don't exercise." Rush's response...

"I know," proudly. "I just don't like it. If I felt good doing it, I would do it, but I don't." I've hated exercise since I could walk. Wish I could still crawl, in fact. But it wouldn't look good. So it was on to other things, a blood test and all this stuff. Cholesterol - ahem - normal. "That can't be, Rush. You're a little overweight." "You're the doctor. You run the lab. It is what it is."

If Rush and the GOP have their way, watch for Homo crawlicus, a new hominid species, to evolve on the North American continent.
12:22 AM on 05/06/2011
Dr Marion Nestle, professor of public health at NYU, was fond of pointing out that the US food industry produces about 4000 calories per day for each citizen. The average person only needs about 2,000 calories a day. The same is pretty much true in most developed countries; its true here in NZ. To make a profit the food industries in the West have to make us overweight; telling people to cut down is bad for business. This being so, there's doesn't seem much point in blaming parents as if they are the sole cause their kids are big; this just lets those with the power to do anything (the govt and business) off the hook.
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Dave Wakeman
10:48 AM on 05/06/2011
I agree that you can share the blame among any number of groups for the obesity epidemic, but the most useful way to begin to make a shift is by getting the parents to take more care with the food that they put into their and their children's bodies.

But, there are other underlying issues that will ultimately have to be addressed to fix this problem.
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IndependentBadger
09:57 PM on 05/05/2011
We've become a nation that will do anything not to "offend". Even kill our children with diabetes and atherosclerosis, so that we don't have to feel that momentary pinprick of discomfort any good parent feels when they have to deny a child something, to educate them and make them stronger. Our kids are fat because we are a lazy people who no longer value the truth over comfort.
04:13 PM on 05/04/2011
This article addresses a myriad of issues. The most important one, from my perspective, are the effectiveness of the ads. Unfortunately many parents are in denial about their children. Rather than take some degree of responsibility it is easier to shift blame. Our society responds to negativity. It's why the news never shows positive stories.

Much like the anti-smoking ads, this may be one of the only ways to shock parents into action. I don't know too much about the campaign, but what I gather from the article is that it was too visible to children. If that was the case then perhaps they should have been more targeted as to where they placed the ads.

As someone who works on this day in and day out I can definitively tell you that the awareness phase of childhood obesity is over. We are now in the phase of converting that to action. The reality is that there are quite a few parents and communities that have done that. However, most haven't and these type of ads may be just what is needed.
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Nate35
12:10 PM on 05/04/2011
Obesity in young children in all likelihood cannot be shamed away. They are simply too immature to make the real connection between eating and being fat. It is my experience (gained from being an overweight kid), however, that something like shame can have a real affect upon older and adolescent children.

Once a person is old enough to truly realize the consequences of their actions, an emotional barrier still stands in the way. Eating less and working out are generally not pleasant practices. A kid who emotionally feels that there is nothing wrong with them is unlikely to undertake such things, especially since it is the overweight who tend to be less athletic and prone to use food emotionally.

I personally had to get to the point of being disgusted with myself to start making the attempt to be healthier. Running and dieting had the emotional impact of self-mortification for me, and became odd rewards in themselves. Make no mistake, this was mainly out of negative emotions, not the positive ones associated with weight loss.

I think that those who care for many young adolescents overcompensate in their attempts to bolster flagging self-esteem. Love them, but never excuse or facilitate an unhealthy lifestyle. Pretending something isn't wrong never makes it better. My main message would be that while self-hate is unhealthy, hating the fact that you are fat is not.
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plaidsportcoat
03:50 PM on 05/04/2011
Working out is actually fun for many children. It's done by dancing and playing outside, running, playing tag, dodge ball, red rover. Too bad adults like you have such a negative attitude towards exercise, and can only think of "working out". The lack of imagination of Americans is what will be our downfall, right along with obesity and fouled living environs.
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Nate35
07:29 PM on 05/04/2011
If the kid is overweight it is obviously because they are not playing enough, either because they aren't inclined to (it's difficult to want to get involved in competitive games when you always lose) or because they lack the opportunity. Either way, simply telling them to play more isn't going to help much, especially if they just end up eating more. Organized sports help, but they aren't year round and few ae intense enough to achieve real results.
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Jake Thomas
elastic
11:55 PM on 05/03/2011
I do not think that putting fat kids in pillaries is going to shame them into slimming down. Teaching better diet habits and putting more funds and energy into physical education programs would probably go a lot further. These ads are condescending and offer no solutions.
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plaidsportcoat
03:52 PM on 05/04/2011
More outdoor activity is the main way - moving, not having teevee and computers that you have to sit in front of. It's very possible to make a change where electronics work with us rather than against our health. That will be for the more creative younger gens to figure out, i hope...
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Koeiseun
12:50 AM on 05/08/2011
Well said!
09:20 PM on 05/03/2011
I think the billboards are a good idea, although I haven't seen them anywhere in my part of the state (Gainesville) . Where have they been placed?
01:54 PM on 05/03/2011
If your child is overweight because you feed them unhealthy food or let them sit in front of a tv all day everyday, this is child abuse in my opinion. Whenever I see rediculously fat kids I always feel sorry for them right away because I was a fat kid, and my entire young life was taken away because of it. I didn't get to participate in sports, I never learned to swim, and I spent all the way up until high school being the quiet fat girl, because I was too shy over my weight to be social.

It's easier than most people realize to lose weight. The more accepted being obese is in this country the harder it is for fat people to have the will power to give up junk food or exercise. I used to be fat, but I gave up junk food and started exercising every day and the weight just fell off.
01:41 PM on 05/03/2011
About time!
The ads on obesity do not go far enough. This is not only a shorter life road, it is a life of
constant self-ridicule. A heavy person doesn't have to be told they're obese for they live
with it every day. They lived with not being able to see their own feet, or get out of a chair
without a struggle, or keep up with other kids.
We spend a fortune of money on cancer, yet we spend nothing on researching the
additives they're putting into foods and the possible effects they are having on our
bodies. A friend who used to work at a dry cereal factory once said that the cereal
was real tasty at one time 'til they added the vitamins. Nobody told them to add
the vitamins, so food corporations have a free reign on our food and the
government has to create an unpartisan science committee to study whether the
chemicals they put into cattle, chickens, and nitrates to keep veggies fresh is
not making us all fatter or slowing down the metabolism. The same study they
did when they found the chemicals in cigarettes in fact as causing more addiction.
We need answers on why the U.S.A. has the greatest obesity problem in the world?
12:59 PM on 05/03/2011
Can you even imagine how at one time an overtly extra weighted person was looked upon with desire and respect.

I guess it's always what's most difficult to attain.
09:53 AM on 05/06/2011
Your statement is no different, than the wonder people used to have at the idea that Black people could be regarded as human beings. Your statement is one of discrimination, and no, claiming well one can lose weight it's not the same will not work here. A person has a set weight point, everyone's weight point is different. Instead of showing compassion, you have chosen to show disgust. What's truly disgusting, is that you can make this statement without any qualms about who it hurts.
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Kathy Fraser
12:30 PM on 05/03/2011
Why don't they put up billboards of little girls dressed in slutty outfits to "jar the parents" back to reality? This is a lot bigger crime than cheetos and causes much more psychological and physical harm to these poor little girls. Only heartless bullies would think targeting children who have no control over their weight, setting them up for sanctioned torture is a good thing. Let's put up a billboard snarking at exercise freaks. Let's see how long they stay quiet.
08:55 AM on 05/12/2011
Sorry, but I don't agree one bit with your politically correct hyperbole. The article is about EDUCATION...nothing more. You're part of the problem, not the solution.
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frank day
Obama cares about all of U.S.
10:11 AM on 05/03/2011
Hey, if can't h8 on poor people, fatties, an there kids? who can we make fun of?

You has to let us make fun of some body. Its all we lozers has left.
09:54 AM on 05/06/2011
Aww, the poor bully won't have anyone to bring down to build themselves up anymore?
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mzrecycle
a very subtle micro-bio
09:00 AM on 05/03/2011
I want to focus on the increase in teasing, both in frequency and intensity. I was in H.S. in the early 60's. I don't remember very much teasing then. In my class of 64 students, there was an obese girl (never heard or witnessed ANY comments) and a (by today's comparison) a slightly chubby guy. He had been given the nickname Porky. Now, I cringe to think of our acceptance of that.
I have a theory that teasing has increased from kids watching sitcoms. they hear actors make comments about another character and that immediately followed by an explosion from the laugh track. The character just smiles or doesn't show any response. The characters continue to have an ongoing relationship.
It wasn't always like that. Can't say when all this started, but from the '70's on I've noticed a mean spirited nature to what put out as comedy on network sitcoms. Murphy Brown is an early example of this. In following decades, it seems to have only gotten worse.

When kids are questioned, they often are unaware that their comments are teasing. They are just mirroring what they see on sitcoms that results in that explosion of laughter.

Let's focus on helping kids to reach a healthy BMI, AND teach children that what they see on TV is not OK to do to real people. Kids need to know that TV comedy is fiction, not something to model their behavior on.