Witness Testimony
Dr. Howell Wechsler
Acting Director, Division of Adolescent and School Health Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Dept. of Health & Human Services 200 Independence Avenue
Washington, DC, 20201
Parents Be Aware: Health Concerns about Dietary Supplements for Overweight Children.
Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations
June 16, 2004
10:00 AM
Introduction
Mr. Chairman, Members of the Committee, thank you for the opportunity to
participate in today's hearing. I am Dr. Howell Wechsler, Acting Director of the
Division of Adolescent and School Health at the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC), which is part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services. Today, I will present an overview of the overweight epidemic among
children and adolescents; describe the scientific information available on
effective interventions to prevent overweight among young people; and identify a
number of Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) initiatives and programs
designed to combat this epidemic.
The National Institutes of Health defines obesity and overweight using a Body
Mass Index (BMI), which is a calculation of a person's weight in kilograms
divided by the square of their height in meters. Health professionals often use
a gender and age specific BMI "growth chart" to help them assess
whether a child or adolescent is overweight. Children are considered overweight
if they are at or above the 95th percentile of the sex-specific BMI for age
growth charts. Doctors and other health care professionals are the best people
to determine whether an overweight child or adolescent's weight and growth
patterns place the individual at risk for health problems. At the current time,
there is no definition of obesity for children and adolescents, because BMI is
not a reliable measure of fatness for children, especially across varying ages
and degrees of maturity, in contrast to adults who have already reached their
peak height. There is also concern related to the potential stigma associated
with using the term "obesity" for children.
Overview of Overweight Among Children and Adolescents in U.S.
In the United States, obesity and overweight has risen at an epidemic rate
during the past 20 years. The prevalence of overweight has more than doubled
among children and has tripled among adolescents since 1980. Approximately 15.3
percent of children aged 6 to 11 years and 15.5 percent of adolescents aged 12
to 19 years were overweight in 1999-2000. There are no signs that the rapid
increase in overweight seen over the past two decades is abating. The latest
data, which cover the period from 1999-2002, is being released today by CDC in
the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The increases in overweight among children and adolescents cut across all
regions of the Nation, ages, and racial and ethnic groups. However, the
prevalence of overweight has been growing at a much faster rate among certain
populations. For example, more African-American and Mexican-American youth are
overweight compared to white youth, and this disparity has grown dramatically
over the past two decades. An economic disparity in the prevalence of overweight
is seen among white adolescents: those from lower income families have a greater
prevalence of overweight compared with white adolescents from higher income
families.
The primary concern of overweight and obesity is one of health and not
appearance. An estimated 400,000 adult deaths each year in the U.S. are
associated with obesity. Total costs (medical costs and days lost from work
because of illness, disability or premature death) from obesity in 2000 were
estimated to be $117 billion.
We have already begun to see the impact of the obesity epidemic on the health
of young people. Although most of the death and disease associated with
overweight and obesity occurs in adults, children who are overweight often
develop risk factors for diseases such as type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure,
and elevated cholesterol levels. Sixty percent of overweight children have at
least one risk factor for cardiovascular disease, in addition to overweight, and
25 percent have two or more. Type 2 diabetes, which is strongly associated with
obesity, was virtually unknown in children and adolescents 10 years ago; today,
it accounts for almost 50 percent of new cases of diabetes among youth in some
communities. A CDC report predicted that one in three Americans born in 2000
will develop diabetes during his or her lifetime. Childhood overweight is also
associated with discrimination, poor self-esteem, and depression.
Furthermore, overweight adolescents have a 70 percent chance of becoming
overweight or obese adults. This increases to 80 percent if one or more parent
is overweight or obese. Adults who are overweight or obese are at increased risk
for premature death, heart disease, type 2 diabetes, certain types of cancer,
breathing problems, arthritis, and psychological problems, such as depression.
One final concern is that childhood overweight that persists into adulthood is
typically more severe than overweight or obesity that develops during adulthood.
Overweight and obesity represent a major long-term public health crisis. If
it is not reversed, the gains in life expectancy and quality of life seen in
recent decades will erode, and more health-related costs will burden the nation.
Government's Role in Combating the Obesity Epidemic Eating a healthy diet and
increasing physical activity reduces weight which is shown to reduce the risk
for many chronic diseases. Often small changes - such as physical activity for
30 minutes a day or consuming 100 fewer calories a day - can result in large
health benefits. In order for individuals to take action, they must have the
right information to empower their lifestyle choices. The government can support
individual action by: " Providing leadership; " Establishing a
framework for understanding issues related to overweight and obesity; "
Coalescing and coordinating efforts to address the issues; " Developing
clear, coherent and effective health messages to ensure that consumers have
accurate and adequate information to make informed decisions about improving
their health; " Identifying and addressing research gaps; " Bringing
diverse stakeholders together to address the epidemic (e.g., food industry,
consumer organizations and the medical community); " Coordinating
private/public campaigns; " Providing training and education materials to
address the epidemic; and " Working to improve the health-promoting nature
of the environments in which individuals make their decisions. HHS has made
addressing the problems of overweight and obesity top priorities for the
Department. In fact, HHS has a large number of current initiatives and programs
underway to address these issues. They include programs in education,
communication and outreach, intervention, diet and nutrition, physical activity
and fitness, disease surveillance, research, clinical preventive services and
therapeutics, and policy and web-based tools. These programs are targeted to a
variety of populations including infants and breastfeeding mothers, children and
adolescents, women, minorities, the elderly, the disabled, rural, and the
general population.
HHS has adopted a comprehensive, multi-component approach to address the
complex epidemic of obesity among children and adolescents. HHS strategies
include: " Providing strong, national leadership " Developing and
delivering clear, coherent, and effective health messages to ensure that
consumers have accurate and adequate information to make informed decisions
about improving their health; " Monitoring the problem and programs to
address the problem so that we can better understand its causes, consequences,
and how it changes over time; " Identifying and addressing research gaps;
" Synthesizing research findings to identify effective policies and
programs; " Developing and disseminating tools to help schools and
community-based organizations implement effective policies and programs; and
" Helping national, state, and local agencies and organizations implement
effective programs.
Department of Health and Human Services Steps Initiative In June 2002,
President Bush launched the HealthierUS initiative designed to help Americans,
especially children, live longer, better, and healthier lives. The President's
HealthierUS initiative helps Americans take steps to improve personal health and
fitness and encourages all Americans to: 1) be physically active every day; 2)
eat a nutritious diet; 3) get preventive screenings; and 4) make healthy choices
concerning alcohol, tobacco, drugs and safety.
In 2003, Tommy Thompson, Secretary of the Department of Health and Human
Services, further advanced the President's initiative by introducing Steps to a
HealthierUS (Steps). At the heart of this program lies both personal
responsibility for the choices Americans make and social responsibility to
ensure that policy makers support programs that foster healthy behaviors and
prevent disease. The Steps initiative envisions a healthy, strong, U.S.
population supported by a health care system in which diseases are prevented
when possible, controlled when necessary, and treated when appropriate.
The Steps Cooperative Agreement Program is one part of Secretary Thompson's
larger Steps initiative. This program aims to help Americans live longer,
better, and healthier lives by reducing the burden of diabetes, obesity, and
asthma and addressing three related risk factors - physical inactivity, poor
nutrition, and tobacco use. In FY 2003, $15 million was provided to 23
communities to support innovative community-based programs that are proven
effective in preventing and controlling chronic diseases. In FY 2004, $44
million will be used to increase funding to existing Steps communities, fund new
communities, and fund one or two national organizations to enhance the capacity
of Steps communities.
As part of the Steps initiative, HHS also recently released a report titled
Prevention: A Blueprint for Action, which outlines simple steps that individuals
and interested groups can take to promote healthy lifestyles and encourage
healthy behavior. The Department's efforts to promote health and prevent
disorders such as obesity rests, in large part, on developing effective messages
that are appropriate for individuals and groups in ways that they can understand
and act upon. An example of this is the CDC's youth media campaign
demonstration, "VERB. It's what you do." VERB's goal has been to
promote social norms that support physical activity and portray fitness as fun
and healthy. HHS/CDC has enlisted partner organizations in the campaign, such as
4-H, Boys and Girls Clubs and the National Hockey League to brand the VERB
message and make it appealing to its pre-teen audience. VERB also reaches out to
parents and other adults influential to young people, encouraging them to
support and participate in physical activity with pre-teens.
Campaign strategies include multimedia advertising and marketing promotions
using television, radio, print, and Web sites; contests and community events;
and partnerships with youth organizations, schools, national professional
associations, and entertainment media that are popular with youth. Reported
preteen (or "tween") awareness of VERB is high at 74 percent, with 90
percent of these youth understanding the campaign's messages. After one year,
campaign impact has been demonstrated by reports of increased free-time physical
activity among several important population subgroups, including the nation's 10
million tween girls, 8.6 million 9-10 year olds, and 6 million tweens from low-
to moderate-income households. For example, after one year of the campaign, the
average 9-10 year old in the nation engaged in more sessions of free-time
physical activity when compared to children who were unaware of VERB.
Other important HHS programs that communicate nutrition and physical activity
messages to the American public are the National Cancer Institute's 5 A Day for
Better Health Program and the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports
(PCPFS). The 5 A Day program seeks to increase to 5 or more the number of daily
servings Americans eat of fruits and vegetables. In addition to its widely known
slogan, the 5 A Day program reaches many individuals through health care
provider networks, the internet, and print media. It also has sponsored the
development and evaluation of a number of school-based interventions to promote
fruit and vegetable consumption among children and adolescents.
The PCPFS promotes physical activity for all ages, backgrounds and abilities
with information and publications (www.fitness.gov) and physical
activity/fitness motivational awards programs (www.presidentschallenge.org). The
Council advises the President and the Secretary of HHS about issues related to
physical activity, fitness, and sports, and recommends programs to promote
regular physical activity for the health of the nation.
CDC Surveillance Efforts Through its ongoing National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey, CDC produces nationally representative data on the
prevalence of overweight among children and adolescents based on measured height
and weight, as well as on their dietary and physical activity behaviors. In
addition, CDC's biennial Youth Risk Behavior Survey provides national, state,
and city data on self-reported height and weight, physical activity, and dietary
behaviors among high school students.
CDC's School Health Policies and Program Study (SHPPS) is a national survey
periodically conducted to assess school health policies and programs of state
education agencies and of nationally representative samples of school districts,
schools, and health and physical education classrooms. SHPPS provides national
data on what schools are doing in relation to physical education, after school
physical activity programs, recess, nutrition education, school food service,
and vending machine policies and practices. CDC's School Health Profiles survey,
conducted every other year, tells us about the extent to which schools are
implementing physical activity and nutrition-related policies and practices in
different states and cities.
CDC's National Nutrition and Physical Activity Program to Prevent Obesity
With 2004 funding, the CDC will support obesity prevention programs in a total
of 28 states. Of these, 23 states will be funded at the capacity-building level
to hire staff with expertise in public health nutrition and physical activity,
build broad based coalitions, develop state plans, identify community resources
and gaps, implement small-scale interventions, and work to raise public health
awareness of changes needed to help state residents achieve and maintain a
healthy weight. The other five states are funded at the basic-implementation
level to put their state plans into action, conduct and evaluate nutrition and
physical activity interventions, train health care and public health
professionals, provide grants to communities, make environmental changes, and
strengthen obesity prevention programs in community settings. In addition, CDC
provides funding to 23 states for the implementation of school-based policies
and programs to help young people avoid behaviors that increase their risk for
obesity specifically unhealthy eating and inadequate physical activity.
Additionally, the CDC is developing a mechanism to quickly deploy staff
(rapid deployment teams) into communities, worksites and schools to facilitate
evaluation of promising strategies aimed at improving nutrition, increasing
physical activity, and preventing obesity. Each team would collect baseline
data, and provide evaluation consultation and technical assistance, identify
methodologic gaps, and provide recommendations to improve the quality of program
evaluation.
Other HHS Efforts Working groups within the Department's agencies have
recently evaluated current HHS programs and activities, made recommendations to
better coordinate these efforts, and identified areas of opportunity for new
initiatives. Two recent major initiatives tied to obesity are the Food and Drug
Administration's (FDA) Obesity Working Group, which will advise the Agency on
innovative ways to deal with the increase in obesity and identify ways to help
consumers lead healthier lives through better nutrition, and the National
Institute of Health's (NIH) development of an Obesity Research Task Force, to
develop a strategic plan for obesity research.
This past year the FDA made a major change in the nutrition label on foods to
include a separate listing of trans fatty acids. This was the first significant
change in the Nutrition Facts panel since it was established in 1993.
The FDA has also undertaken a broad effort to crack down on misleading
information and/or unsafe dietary supplements, and has proposed new regulations
to establish good manufacturing practice requirements for dietary supplements.
FDA has focused its enforcement efforts over the past year to ensure consumers
are not being harmed as a result of claims that overstate the effectiveness of
dietary supplement products. The Agency took steps to remove dietary supplements
containing ephedrine alkaloids from the market. These products were extensively
promoted for aiding weight control and boosting sports performance and energy.
The totality of the available data showed little evidence of benefit from
dietary supplements containing ephedrine alkaloids except for modest, short-term
weight loss insufficient to improve health, while confirming that ephedrine
alkaloids raise blood pressure and otherwise stress the circulatory system.
These effects are linked to significant adverse health outcomes, including heart
attack and stroke. In March of this year, the Agency announced various efforts
to crack down on products containing androstenedione, or "andro." This
class of products poses substantial safety risks to all Americans, particularly
our nation's youth and athletes.
One of the key messages of this effort is that there are no safe quick fixes
when it comes to losing weight and improving athletic performance, and it is
only through proper diet, nutrition and exercise that we can improve our
physical performance and, more importantly, maintain and improve our health.
Also, in the school setting, the Health Resources and Services
Administration's Healthy Schools, Healthy Communities program promotes and
establishes comprehensive school-based health centers to improve the health of
at-risk school aged children. Services provided by the centers include nutrition
education and counseling, support groups for overweight children, dietary
surveillance, and nutrition screening.
National Dietary Guidelines HHS is collaborating with the U.S. Department of
Agriculture to review the Dietary Guidelines that were published in 2000 and to
draft new 2005 Dietary Guidelines for Americans. In light of the growing number
of overweight and obese Americans, a major focus of the new guidelines will be
providing guidance to the public on maintaining a healthy weight and creating
lifestyles that balance the number of calories eaten with the number of calories
expended. These guidelines must: (1) contain nutritional and dietary information
and guidelines for the general public, (2) be based on the preponderance of
scientific and medical knowledge current at the time of publication, and (3) be
promoted by each Federal Agency involved in a Federal food, nutrition, or health
program.
Strategies for Combating Overweight in Children Overweight and obesity result
from an imbalance between caloric intake and caloric expenditure. Many factors
have contributed to the unfavorable trends in physical activity and nutrition
that have fueled the obesity epidemic. Consequently, there will be no silver
bullet, no single change strategy to solve these problems. Multiple strategies
addressing multiple factors will be needed to successfully combat the obesity
epidemic.
Reviews of research conducted to date indicate that there are at least three
behavioral strategies for reducing rates of overweight and obesity that appear
to be justified by the current state of knowledge. These are: (1) increased
physical activity for the population, (2) reduced sedentary behaviors, such as
television viewing and video gaming, for children and adolescents, and (3) the
promotion of breast feeding and efforts to increase its duration.
Increased physical activity for overweight patients reduces many of the
co-morbidities associated with obesity such as hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and
glucose intolerance; maintains weight after weight loss; and prevents weight
gain. The dose of physical activity necessary to prevent weight gain among
normal or overweight children, adolescents, or adults has not been established,
although one hour of daily, moderate intensity physical activity appears
required for weight maintenance in adults after weight loss.
A factor in the prevalence of overweight among our youth may be the amount of
time children and adolescents are sedentary, watching television or playing
video games, for example. One school-based study demonstrated a two percent
decrease in overweight as a result of a curriculum that included reduced
television time. A second school-based study demonstrated reduced rates of
weight gain in children who reduced television time.
Breastfeeding is the most appropriate form of feeding for most infants and
clearly reduces the incidence of acute diseases of infancy and early childhood.
In addition, recent studies indicate that breastfeeding reduces the risk of
childhood overweight by 15-20 percent.
While we have good ideas about the types of behaviors we need to promote, the
critical challenge before us is to identify how we can effectively help young
people and their families to adopt these behaviors.
Tools to help schools and community-based organizations HHS has developed,
and is continuing to develop, a variety of tools that schools can use to
implement policies and practices recommended by the CDC guidelines. These
include: " CDC's School Health Index for Physical Activity and Healthy
Eating, a widely used self-assessment and planning tool that enables schools to
identify the strengths and weaknesses of their health promotion policies and
programs, develop an action plan for improving student health, and involve
teachers, parents, students, and the community in improving school policies and
programs.
" Fit Healthy and Ready to Learn, a school health policy guide,
developed with CDC support by the National Association of State Boards of
Education, that provides education policymakers and administrators with sample
physical activity and nutrition policies and information to support the
policies.
" CDC's Building a Healthier Future Through School Health Programs
describes promising practices that states should consider when planning
school-based policies and programs to help young people avoid behaviors that
increase their risk for obesity and chronic disease, especially tobacco use,
unhealthy eating, and inadequate physical activity.
" Power of Choice, an after-school program jointly developed by FDA and
the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) that guides pre-teens toward a healthier
lifestyle by motivating and empowering them to make better food and physical
activity choices in real-life settings.
" Fruit and Vegetables Galore, developed by USDA in collaboration with
HHS, provides tips to school foodservice professionals on planning, purchasing,
preparing, presenting, and promoting fruits and vegetables. It also includes
suggestions for working with teachers by providing them with teaching tools and
by supporting their educational efforts, making daily meal offerings competitive
with other commercial options available to students, and getting students
excited about healthful eating.
" Kids Walk to School, a user-friendly manual developed by CDC that
provides information and resources for community partners to increase
opportunities for daily physical activity by encouraging children to walk to and
from school in groups accompanied by adults and by encouraging collaboration
among partners to create an environment supportive of walking and bicycling to
school safely. In addition, HHS agencies are developing important new tools, to
be released in the coming months that will help schools promote healthy eating
and physical activity. " Making It Happen - School Nutrition Success
Stories (MIH), a joint product of CDC and USDA, tells the stories of 32 schools
and school districts that have implemented innovative strategies to improve the
nutritional quality of foods and beverages offered and sold on school campuses.
The most consistent theme emerging from these case studies is that students will
buy and consume healthful foods and beverages-and schools can make money from
healthful options.
" The Health Education Curriculum Analysis Tool is a user-friendly
checklist designed by CDC to help schools select or develop curricula based on
the extent to which they have characteristics that research has identified as
being critical for leading to positive effects on youth health behaviors. The
companion Physical Education Curriculum Analysis Tool will help school districts
develop state-of-the-art physical education curriculum based on insights gained
from research and best practice. " Media Smart Youth: Food, Fitness, and
Fun is a curriculum with supporting materials developed by the National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development for youth ages 11-13 years old.
It is designed to create awareness of the role that media play in shaping values
concerning physical activity and nutrition, while building skills to encourage
critical thinking, healthy lifestyle choices, and informed decision making, now
and in their future. CONCLUSION Successfully combating the overweight epidemic
among children and adults will require the involvement of many sectors and
levels of society. Although national initiatives can play an important role,
they are not sufficient by themselves. Community-based initiatives are critical
for reaching Americans where they live, work, go to school, and play.
State-level programs are critical for supporting and disseminating
community-based activities. HHS is implementing a comprehensive approach to
reach the American people through these various levels.
There is a great deal more that we need to learn about intervention
strategies to prevent overweight among children and adolescents. Key research
questions that need to be addressed include: " Which are the most important
behaviors to target to influence overweight and obesity? " Which mediating
variables should be targeted to influence obesity-related behaviors? "
Which are the types of interventions that have the greatest impact on the most
critical mediating variables and behaviors? " How do we translate efficacy
study findings into real-world policies and programs? " How do we
effectively and efficiently disseminate effective policies and programs? "
Do the effects of overweight and obesity prevention policies and programs last
over time?
CDC, NIH and other HHS agencies will lead the Nation in conducting the
research necessary to answer these questions.
We have, however, learned a great deal about effective strategies for
promoting physical activity and healthy eating among young people. We know that
no one strategy alone will be sufficient and that our chances for success will
be greater if we use multiple strategies to address multiple factors that
contribute to caloric imbalance and if we involve multiple sectors of society at
the community, state, and national levels. HHS is leading the national effort to
combat the overweight epidemic in children through a comprehensive,
multi-faceted, multi-level approach. We are committed to doing all that we can
to help our young people enjoy good health now and for a lifetime.
I thank you for your interest and the opportunity to share information about
strategies to combat the overweight epidemic in children, and would be happy to
answer your questions.
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