Let's Move!

First Lady Michelle Obama participates in a Let's Move! and NHL partnership event in March 2011

Let's Move! seeks to combat the epidemic of childhood obesity and encourage a healthy lifestyle through "a comprehensive, collaborative, and community-oriented initiative that addresses all of the various factors that lead to childhood obesity [. . .] engaging every sector of society that impacts the health of children to provide schools, families and communities the simple tools they need to help kids be more active, eat better, and get healthy."[1][2]

The initiative has the initially stated goal of "solving the challenge of childhood obesity within a generation so that children born today will reach adulthood at a healthy weight."[3][4][5] Let's Move seeks to decrease childhood obesity to 5% by 2030. [6]

The campaign was announced on February 9, 2010 by Michelle Obama. She indicated the campaign would encourage healthier food in schools, better food labeling and more physical activity for children.[7] On the same date, President Barack Obama signed a presidential memorandum creating the Task Force on Childhood Obesity to review current programs and develop a national action plan. The Task Force reviews policy and programs related to child nutrition and physical activity. It hopes to create change through a national action plan with five goals: 1. Creating a healthy start for children 2. Empowering parents and caregivers 3. Providing healthy food in schools 4. Improving access to healthy, affordable foods 5. Increasing physical activity The White House Task Force hopes to bring the childhood obesity rate down to five percent by 2030.[8]

A song, "Move Your Body", was released to promote the campaign called Let's Move! Flash Workout. The song was by Beyoncé Knowles and Swizz Beatz, and the video was shot in a school cafeteria where Beyoncé was dancing with children.[9]

The initiative was led for several years by Sam Kass, the personal chef to the Obamas who became the first-ever White House Senior Policy Advisor on Nutrition.[10] He was succeeded in 2015 as both Executive Director of Let's Move! and Senior Policy Advisor on Nutrition by Debra Eschmeyer, a cofounder of FoodCorps.[11]

Since the Let’s Move initiative is a collaboration of many government agencies and private entities, it lacks full-time employees. Department heads, business executives, volunteers, teachers, legislators, and others carry out the mission and goals of Let’s Move in conjunction with their primary work obligations. Michelle Obama is the chief spokeswoman and promoter, but she does not have staff solely dedicated to carrying out the Let’s Move initiative. Due to the vast array of programs and services, the number of people served by Let’s Move is difficult to estimate. The Let’s Move initiative affects nearly every child in America in some way due to its broad outreach. Whether children’s school lunches are based on the new nutrition guidelines suggested by the initiative, or children use equipment donated to schools to promote exercise, it is nearly impossible for children to not be affected by Let’s Move [12]

Childhood obesity

Main article: Childhood obesity

Body mass index (or BMI) is a measurement of weight in relation to height that can help to determine weight status. In children, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (or CDC) determine that a child is overweight if he/she is above the 85th percentile and lower than the 95th percentile and obese if at or above the 95th percentile.[13]

The CDC indicates that there are several factors that can contribute to childhood obesity: genetic factors; behavioral factors including energy intake, physical activity and sedentary behavior; and environmental factors.[14] Overweight and obesity pose many potential risks and consequences: psychological; cardiovascular disease; among additional risks including asthma, hepatic steatosis, sleep apnea, and type 2 diabetes.[13] Today nearly one in five children in the U.S. between ages 6–19 are obese, and one in three are overweight. The childhood obesity rate tripled from 1980-1999 creating an epidemic and a generation where children may have shorter life spans than their parents.[15]

The Let's Move! initiative focuses on the reform of behavioral factors and environmental factors by focusing on active lifestyles and healthy eating through community involvement, including but not limited to schools, parents, work places, and healthcare providers.[16][17]

Nutrition

To promote healthy eating, the Let's Move! initiative emphasizes nutrition information, a next generation food "icon", food nutrition labeling and having pediatricians as partners.[18] The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) presents its Let's Move food choice guidelines on the webpage called MyPlate, located at ChooseMyPlate.gov.[19] Guidelines take the form of "half all grains eaten should be whole grains" [20] and 37 nutrition tips.[21] Let's Move! also provides consumers with nutrition information through the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (or FDA)'s "New Front-of-Package Labeling Initiative" and "New Menu and Vending Machines Labeling Requirements".[22]

President Barack Obama meets with children from a Let's Move! tennis clinic on the South Lawn of the White House.

Let's Move! advocates healthy eating habits to be promoted by families, schools, and communities.[18] Let's Move! urges mothers to eat more healthily when pregnant and offers links to a special "MyPyramid Plan for Moms" so they can create a personalized and healthy diet.[23] The initiative also provides guidelines for parents to set up and promote healthy eating habits for their entire family and children.[18] In order for healthier eating to be promoted at schools, Let's Move! promotes the USDA's HealthierUS School Challenge.[24]

"The HealthierUS School Challenge (HUSSC) is a voluntary initiative established in 2004 to recognize those schools participating in the National School Lunch Program that have created healthier school environments through promotion of nutrition and physical activity.
In February 2010, First Lady Michelle Obama introduced Let's Move!, incorporating the HealthierUS School Challenge into her campaign to raise a healthier generation of kids. At the time, monetary incentive awards became available for each HUSSC award level: Bronze, Silver, Gold, and Gold Award of Distinction."[25]

Random House publishers has said Michelle Obama will be writing a book on her White House garden, and her family's favorite healthy cooking ideas.[26]

Community Involvement

For Let's Move to work effectively, the community needs to be involved. Schools need to implement health programs. Parents need to teach their children healthy habits. The following sections describe how organizations and businesses have gotten involved in this nationwide movement.

Chefs Move to Schools

Chefs Move to Schools was founded in May 2010 as part of First Lady Michelle Obama's Let's Move campaign.[27] The Chefs Move to Schools program is a nationwide effort to teach culinary skills to school children and to get them to try new, healthful food options.[27] Professional chefs volunteer a specified amount of their time to cook with students and/or to help train school workers in how to prepare and provide food in a healthier manner.[28] As of February 2, 2012 about 3,500 schools were partnered with professional chefs in an effort to educate students about a healthier diet in an entertaining and appealing way.[29]

The program is also figure headed by Chef Sam Kass, an assistant chef at the White House and the Senior Policy Advisor for Healthy Food Initiatives.[30] Food Network star Rachael Ray also publicly supports the program and has encouraged children to be involved in the kitchen on episodes of her show Rachael Ray.[30] Other partners of the program include the School Nutrition Association, the American Culinary Federation, Cooking Matters, the United States Department of Agriculture, the Culinary Trust, the Partnership for a Healthier America, Cornell University, Philip Lempert the Supermarket Guru, the Harvard School of Public Health, the International Corporate Chefs Association, and the Food Service Management Institute.[30]

Chefs can sign up to participate in the program on the website on the official Chefs Move to Schools website to be matched with a school in their area.[28] They can select any or all of what they are interested in: helping to plant a school garden, teaching children about healthier living in the classroom, helping officials to develop school lunch menu items, and training students about culinary skills in the kitchen.[28] On the application, chefs are also asked to provide information about their qualifications and training.[31] Chefs are asked to specify how many hours they can devote to the program and which days of the week they can volunteer. These profiles are matched with other profiles that are created by schools to become an official partnership. Once the partnership is created, Chefs Move to Schools provides schools and chefs with resources to help them get started and to help guide both parties through a successful process.[28]

Business Involvement

Private businesses have also decided to make changes to improve healthy habits for kids. For example, Disney now requires that all foods sold and advertised have to follow nutritional guidelines of increasing fruit and vegetable consumption while decreasing calorie count. Also, Walgreens, Superval, and Walmart have announced building or expanding stores in areas that have limited access to healthy foods. Another example is the US Olympic Committee. In 2012, members provided free or low cost athletic classes to children. [32] These are only a few of the many examples of how the community is jumping in to help improve the lives of children all across the country.

Physical activity

Students at the Oconaluftee Job Corps Civilian Conservation Center in Cherokee practice their choreography for a new student-produced fitness video

The CDC recommends that children engage in one hour or more of physical activity every day. It states that children should do three different types of activity: aerobic activity, muscle strengthening, and bone strengthening.[33]

Let's Move! looks to promote physical activity through the support and cooperation of families, schools, and communities. On children, the initiative states, "Those who feel supported by friends and families or are surrounded by others interested in physical activity, are more likely to participate."[34] Let's Move! also provides several guidelines for schools to promote physical activity, including strong physical education programs, and indicates the subsidizing of such guidelines with several government programs.[35] Guidelines by which physical activity can be promoted in communities are also outlined on the Let's Move! website.[36]

Impact Evaluation

The Center for Disease Control published obesity rates broken down by age group. The percentage that is most promising for the Let’s Move initiative is the obesity in children ages 2-5 has dropped by 43% from 14% to 8% prevalence according to the study sample[37] If this drop is due to efforts by Let's Move, this is a huge win. However, there are critics who are looking at every other child age group where the obesity percentage has not budged. [38]

A major concern with the Let’s Move program is that it does not evaluate itself. It allows programs like the Center for Disease Control and other independent organizations to evaluate whether or not Let’s Move is making a difference. This causes critics and proponents to have a hard time improving the program without measurements, and the program lacks an understanding of impact. Let’s Move would benefit immensely from putting together its own group to go through steps to evaluate how its program is affecting the country. It should be evaluated on two major indicators: increasing healthy childhood eating and increasing childhood physical activity.

Collaboration

Let’s Move faces a challenge: effective coordination between all involved agencies, companies, non-profits, and levels of government. Dr. Susanna Campbell, an international relations scholar, and Michael Harnett, an international business professional, conducted research and discussed the barriers to coordination, the main concepts of coordination, and recommendations for improving coordination. Rodrigo Serrano also provides insight into creating incentive programs to promote coordination.[39]

Organizations are sovereign and the individuals within are accountable first to their organization and second to the coordination effort. Conflicts can arise when the goals of the coordination process don’t align well with an agency’s main goals. If there is a pressing problem to solve, it acts as its own incentive for coordination as long as the problem involves a possibility to find a coordinated solution.[40] Of all the incentive programs proposed, an incentive system involving recognition may be the most effective and efficient. Agencies and organizations associated with Let’s Move could receive an award as a result of making a positive impact according to Let's Move's goals and mission. Organizations could report their impact to the Task Force, and Michelle Obama could recognize the organizations that engaged the most and had the greatest impact. The award would also help remind organizations of the importance of working together to solve the problem of childhood obesity.

Let’s Move could also improve its coordination process by establishing clear field officers in each associated organization and have them report to a central authority figure, like the Task Force on Childhood Obesity. The improved coordination process would make sure each organization or agency is accountable and that there isn’t overlap or redundancy

Accomplishments


See also

References

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  2. "Regis & Kelly Welcome Michelle Obama to Raise Obesity Awareness". ThirdAge. February 8, 2011. Retrieved April 6, 2012.
  3. "America's Move to Raise A Healthier Generation of Kids". Let's Move. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  4. "First Lady Michelle Obama Launches Let's Move: America's Move to Raise a Healthier Generation of Kids". The White House. February 9, 2010. Retrieved April 6, 2012.
  5. "Let's Move!". President's Council on Fitness, Sports & Nutrition. Retrieved April 6, 2012.
  6. http://www.letsmove.gov/accomplishments
  7. "Michelle Obama says 'Let's Move' on obesity in American kids". The Christian Science Monitor. February 9, 2010. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  8. "White House Task Force on Childhood Obesity Report to the President". Let's Move. Retrieved December 8, 2015.
  9. "Video: Beyoncé – ‘Move Your Body’". Rap-Up. April 26, 2011. Retrieved April 6, 2012.
  10. "White House Announces the Departure of Sam Kass". The White House. December 8, 2014. Retrieved October 26, 2015.
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  15. "Michelle Obama spearheads US push against childhood obesity". The Sydney Morning Herald. February 10, 2010. Retrieved April 6, 2012.
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  17. "Learn The Facts". Let's Move!. Retrieved April 6, 2012.
  18. 1 2 3 "Eat Healthy". Let's Move!. Retrieved April 6, 2012.
  19. "ChooseMyPlate". United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 31 May 2014.
  20. "ChooseMyPlate". United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 31 May 2014.
  21. "ChooseMyPlate". United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 31 May 2014.
  22. "U.S. Food and Drug Administration: Labeling and Nutrition". Retrieved November 26, 2010.
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  24. "Healthy Schools". Let's Move!. 2012-02-10. Retrieved April 6, 2012.
  25. "United States Department of Agriculture Food and Nutrition Service: HealthierUS School Challenge". Retrieved November 26, 2010.
  26. "Michelle Obama to write book about White House Garden". Retrieved March 18, 2011.
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  28. 1 2 3 4 "Get Started". Retrieved April 5, 2012.
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  35. "Active Schools". Let's Move!. Retrieved April 6, 2012.
  36. "Active Communities". Let's Move!. Retrieved April 6, 2012.
  37. http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/372041/does-obesity-report-prove-lets-move-campaign-works-alec-torres
  38. http://www.cnn.com/2015/04/06/politics/michelle-obamas-lets-move-turns-5-is-it-working/
  39. Campbell, Susanna P. and Michael Hartnett. 2005. A framework for improved coordination. https://www.regjeringen.no/ globalassets/ upload/UD/Vedlegg/missions/framework.pdf (accessed November 25, 2015).
  40. Serrano, Rodrigo. 2005. What makes inter-agency coordination work? Insights from the literature and two case studies. Inter-American Development Bank Sustainable Development Department Social Development Division. www.iadb.org/sds/soc (accessed November 25, 2015).
  41. "Accomplishments". Let's Move. Retrieved December 8, 2015.
  42. "Accomplishments". Let's Move. Retrieved December 8, 2015.
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