Close
Current temperature in Boston - 62 °
BECOME A MEMBER
Get access to a personalized news feed, our newsletter and exclusive discounts on everything from shows to local restaurants, All for free.
Already a member? Sign in.
The Bay State Banner
BACK TO TOP
The Bay State Banner
POST AN AD SIGN IN

Trending Articles

Temu or Shein could be hazardous to your health — especially if you’re Black

Mass. electorate to vote on five ballot questions — Here’s what you should know

Residents say drug activity migrated into neighborhoods surrounding Mass. and Cass since tent removal

READ PRINT EDITION

Program to fight obesity in kids expands to Boston

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ivonne Borrero liked that her son’s teacher was pushing him to do good work. She just didn’t like the rewards: The pizza parties and Burger King coupons weren’t helping 11-year-old Jose’s waistline.

So Borrero and other parents asked for changes. The teacher responded by stopping the fatty prizes, and health officials introduced parents to We Can!, a federal anti-obesity program for children that pushes subtle changes at home. It’s now helping Jose and other kids avoid growing out as they grow up.

“Little, bitty changes have really made a big difference in all of our lives,” Borrero said.

National Institutes of Health (NIH) officials announced last Thursday that the We Can! program is teaming up with the Association of Children’s Museums, as well as the cities of Boston, Pittsburgh and Las Vegas, the three largest cities yet to adopt the 2-year-old initiative.

We Can! — short for Ways to Enhance Children’s Activity and Nutrition — is aimed at kids 8-13 and pushes commonsense steps to keep off weight, such as eating fewer high-fat foods, exercising more and spending less time staring at television and computer screens.

But it doesn’t just try to persuade kids to give up the fun foods and activities that pack on pounds. It relies on parents to make it easier for kids to make healthier choices.

In the Borrero home, the family staple of rice and beans is now cooked in canola or sesame seed oil, not vegetable oil. Portions are smaller. The Borreros drink more water and less juice. Jose’s grandmother has been asked to please not send those delicious cream-filled wafer cookies.

Meanwhile, Jose has joined a city tennis program and, with his mother and 18-year-old sister, is walking more. Everyone feels better, said Borrero, 48, a school psychologist.

Previous childhood obesity programs at her NIH agency, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, didn’t include parents as much, so the message didn’t stick as well, said Karen Donato, We Can! program manager.

“Parents are role models for kids. They provide food for kids. They’re the people in charge,” Donato said.

The program began in 2005 amid sobering data about Americans and weight problems: About a third of U.S. children are overweight or obese. When obese children become obese adults, it’s much tougher for them to shed the weight, research shows.

A community that officially commits to We Can! agrees to host numerous parent and youth events that promote the program. Besides the three cities announced last week, five others — Roswell, Ga., South Bend, Ind., Gary, Ind., Armstrong County, Pa., and Carson City, Nev. — already are official We Can! communities. About 450 communities in 44 states are using some part of the program.

Borerro’s gradual approach has paid off with her son. She’s been surprised and thrilled to see him request a wrap, not a burger, during visits to the mall. He also voluntarily got rid of the unhealthiest candy from his Halloween bag.

It’s not that Jose isn’t interested in junk food anymore, his mother said. But now he knows what’s better for him, and there’s more room to negotiate an occasional treat.

“A brownie once in a while is not a bad thing,” she said.

(Associated Press)