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Home > Shape of the Nation Report
Shape of the Nation ReportFollowing is the Executive Summary of the report to the President From the Secretary of Health and Human Services and the Secretary of Education entitled Promoting Better Health for Young People Through Physical Activity and Sports. To download the full report, visit the CDC Web site. National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion Adolescent and School Health Promoting Better Health for Young People Through Physical Activity and Sports Executive SummaryOur nation's young people are, in large measure, inactive, unfit, and increasingly overweight. In the long run, this physical inactivity threatens to reverse the decades-long progress we have made in reducing death from cardiovascular diseases and to devastate our national health care budget. In the short run, physical inactivity has contributed to an unprecedented epidemic of childhood obesity that is currently plaguing the United States. The percentage of young people who are overweight has doubled since 1980. Enhancing efforts to promote participation in physical activity and sports among young people is a critical national priority. Physical activity has been identified as one of our nation¹s leading health indicators in Healthy People 2010, the national health objectives for the decade. Enhancing efforts to promote participation in physical activity and sports among young people is a critical national priority. That is why, on June 23, 2000, President Clinton issued an Executive Memorandum directing the Secretary of Health and Human Services and the Secretary of Education to work together to identify and report within 90 days on strategies to promote better health for our nation's youth through physical activity and fitness. The President concluded his directive: By identifying effective new steps and strengthening public-private partnerships, we will advance our efforts to prepare the nation's young people for lifelong physical fitness. To increase their levels of physical activity and fitness, young people can benefit from
StrategiesThe following strategies are all designed to promote lifelong participation in enjoyable and safe physical activity and sports.
ImplementationFull implementation of the strategies recommended in this report will require the commitment of resources, hard work, and creative thinking from many partners in federal, state, and local governments; nongovernmental organizations; and the private sector. Only through extensive collaboration and coordination can resources be maximized, strategies integrated, and messages reinforced. Development or expansion of a broad, national coalition to promote better health through physical activity and sports is an important first step toward collaboration and coordination. A foundation to support the promotion of physical activity could complement the work of the coalition and play a critical role in obtaining the resources needed to help our young people become physically active and fit. The 10 strategies and the process for facilitating their implementation described in this report provide the framework for our children to rediscover the joys of physical activity and to incorporate physical activity as a fundamental building-block of their present and future lives. |
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