Editorial: Day care bill deserves consideration

Will Louisiana lawmakers pass legislation promoting exercise and limiting sedentary time in day care facilities?

Fat chance, critics say.

The House Committee on Health &

Welfare has deferred action on House Bill 993, authored by State Rep.

Patrick C. Williams,

D-Shreveport, which appeared to offer good first steps in

mandating healthy habits for children in day care. For example,

the bill would have mandated no more than 60 minutes in front of

an electronic device, which would include a TV set, devices

that play movies or videos, computers, video game devices or a

handheld electronic device.

Moreover, the bill would have

mandated that at least an hour a day be set aside for physical activity.

Specific guidelines

for activities would have been developed by the Louisiana Advisory

Council on Child Care and Early Education by year’s end.

The bill may not be perfect, but it surely is worth discussion and improvement. That’s because obesity and childhood obesity

— and all of their myriad, related problems — are all around us, especially in Louisiana.

The national Institute of Medicine

this week suggested schools play a major role in fighting childhood

obesity because school

is where children spend most of their days and eat many of their

meals. The same might be said for child care. The institute

made plain that the problem is not just a matter of individual

choice, but it is a matter of wide social concern. Obese people

suffer a variety of maladies, which drain our medical resources

and undercut our strength as a nation.

Obesity is a critical problem in

Louisiana, and childhood obesity is especially problematic here.

Louisiana’s overall obesity

rate is 34.6, well above the national average of 28 percent.

Calcasieu Parish’s obesity rate is 37.3 — higher still — and

the city’s obesity rate is 37.7. So the problem, according to

those 2009 statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and

Prevention, is apparent.

Carl Comeaux, co-chair of the

Partnership for a Healthier Southwest Louisiana, wrote recently in these

pages that our state’s

children rank fourth in obesity in the U.S., adding, “They join a

growing number of young people who cannot expect to outlive

their parents due to the obesity and its health effects.” Every

responsible, loving parent wants more than that for his or

her own children.

Every Louisianian has a role to play in promoting good health, starting with their own responsibility to eat healthy foods

in proper servings and to exercise. Parents should take care to instill healthy habits in their children.

But schools and day cares — that’s where young people spend much of their time — also have a role to play. Our lawmakers would

do well to offer careful guidance.

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This editorial was written by a member of the American Press Editorial Board. Its content reflects the collaborative opinion of the Board, whose members include Bobby Dower, Ken Stickney,

Jim Beam, Dennis Spears, Crystal Stevenson and Donna Price.