You have reached an outdated page.
Please visit the Defeat Diabetes Foundation's new Web site at:
http://www.DefeatDiabetes.org
Defeat Diabetes: Tennessee Fights Obesity and Diabetes With Small Steps

Home

About Diabetes

Complications

Warning Signs

Screening Test

Donate Now

E-Lerts
Index

Latest News

Diabetes Terms

Health & Fitness

Online Press Center

Meet Mr. Diabetes®

Wake Up And Walk® Tour

Headlines & Stories

About Us - Contact Info

Message Board

Links

 

Tennessee Fights Obesity and Diabetes With Small Steps
posted August 19, 2004

In less than two years, obesity will be the No. 1 killer

Obesity is a big problem in Tennessee, more than in many other states. But the solution may be in small steps. Walk more, eat less and include dairy products to burn fat is the message of a largely grass-roots, consumer-driven, voluntary health project called Tennessee on the Move.

"Nationwide, about a quarter of men and a third of women are obese, and about two-thirds of adults are overweight," said University of Tennessee nutrition professor Michael Zemel, who will direct the project.

"Where does Tennessee fall on that list? We are a little bit higher on each of those numbers," he said.

The money also will buy educational materials, support a Web site that residents can personalize to reach their own specific health goals and supply pedometers for walkers who can't afford them.

"We have an enormous problem and our inclination when faced with an enormous problem is to seek enormous solutions, to seek the big ideas," Zemel said. "What we propose instead is small steps, the small idea."

Many people can't spend hours at a gym or radically change their diet to health food, but Zemel sees huge gains in smaller doses.

His recommendations:

- Move more. Walk 2,000 steps, or about a mile, each day.

- Eat less. Reduce consumption by 100 calories, about a pat of butter.

- Include lowfat dairy products that UT research has found can help burn fat.

This formula will prevent the weight gain of 1 to 3 pounds that most Americans experience each year, according to the program.

"When you are in a hole the first thing you have to do is stop digging," Wamp said. "We want obesity to stop in this country and not get worse so we can reverse this trend."

Being overweight increases risks for hypertension, coronary heart disease, diabetes and several cancers, Zemel said. Obesity ranks second only to smoking as the nation's greatest preventable health threat.

At the current rate, he said, "In less than two years, obesity will be the No. 1 killer."

Tennessee on the Move: http://www.americaonthemove.org/tn

Source: Diabetes In Control.com.

August 2004 News Article Index

Free Diabetes E-Lerts™ Newsletter:  Subscribe


   
To Change, Or Even Help Save The Lives Of Millions Of People,
Consider Making a Donation to Defeat Diabetes Foundation - Thank You! 

To be sure and come back to keep up with all the Latest News and important information for diabetics - and to remind yourself to manage and control your diabetes, click the yellow link below to add a small icon of our Defeat Diabetes® "Torch" logo to your desktop.  All you need to do after that is click on the "Torch" to open our website.  Remember, we're here for you!Add Us To Your Desktop! 

                                                                                                               

      We subscribe to the HONcode principles of the HON Foundation. Click to verify.We subscribe to the HONcode principles of the Health On the Net Foundation
Date of last update:  10/15/04
To contact Webmaster: webmaster@defeatdiabetes.org 

Translate this page into Spanish using FreeTranslation.com.

 © Copyright 2001 - 2004, Defeat Diabetes Foundation, Inc., All Rights Reserved