Federal Register: September 8, 2010 (Volume 75, Number 173)
DOCID: fr08se10-149 FR Doc 2010-22590
Presidential Documents
Veterans Affairs Department
NOTICE: Part III
DOCID: fr08se10-149
DOCUMENT SUMMARY:
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Title 3--
The President
[[Page 54757]]
Proclamation 8554 of September 1, 2010
National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month, 2010
By the President of the United States of America
A Proclamation
One of the greatest responsibilities we have as a
Nation is to safeguard the health and well-being of our
children. We now face a national childhood obesity
crisis, with nearly one in every three of America's
children being overweight or obese. There are concrete
steps we can take right away as concerned parents,
caregivers, educators, loved ones, and a Nation to
ensure that our children are able to live full and
active lives. During National Childhood Obesity
Awareness Month, I urge all Americans to take action to
meet our national goal of solving the problem of childhood obesity within a generation.
Childhood obesity has been a growing problem for
decades. While it has afflicted children across our
country, certain Americans have been disproportionately
affected. Particular racial and ethnic groups are more
severely impacted, as are certain regions of the
country. In addition, obesity can be influenced by a
number of environmental and behavioral factors,
including unhealthy eating patterns and too little physical activity at home and at school.
We must do more to halt and reverse this epidemic, as
obesity can lead to severe and chronic health problems
during childhood, adolescence and adulthood, including
heart disease, diabetes, cancer, and asthma. Not only
does excess weight adversely affect our children's
well-being, but its associated health risks also impose
great costs on families, our health care system, and
our economy. Each year, nearly $150 billion are spent
to treat obesity-related medical conditions. This is
not the future to which we want to consign our
children, and it is a burden our health care system cannot bear.
Earlier this year, the First Lady announced ``Let's
Move!''--an initiative to combat childhood obesity at
every stage of a child's life. As President, I created
a Task Force on Childhood Obesity to marshal the
combined resources of the Federal Government to develop
interagency solutions and make recommendations on how
to respond to this crisis. The Task Force produced a report containing a comprehensive set of
recommendations that will put our country on track for
solving this pressing health issue and preventing it from threatening future generations.
The report outlines broad strategies to address
childhood obesity, including providing healthier food
in schools, ensuring access to healthy affordable food,
increasing opportunities for physical activity,
empowering parents and caregivers with better
information about making healthy choices, and giving
children a healthy start in life. I invite all
Americans to visit LetsMove.gov to learn more about
these recommendations and find additional information
and resources on how to help children eat healthy and stay active.
The new landmark health care law, the Affordable Care
Act (ACA), includes a number of important tools for
fighting and reversing the rise of childhood obesity.
All new health insurance plans will be required to
cover both screenings for childhood obesity and
counseling on nutrition and sustained weight loss,
without charging any out of pocket costs. The ACA also requires
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large restaurant and vending machine operators to
provide visible nutritional information about the
products they sell, enabling all Americans to make more
informed choices about the foods they eat. As part of
my Administration's comprehensive approach to combating
this epidemic, the ACA includes millions in new funds
to implement prevention activities nationwide that
support recommendations of the Task Force on Childhood Obesity.
Our history shows that when we are united in our
convictions, we can safeguard the health and safety of
America's children for generations to come. When waves
of American children were stricken with polio and
disabled for life, we developed a nationwide
immunization program that eradicated this crippling
disease from our shores within a matter of decades.
When we discovered that children were going to school
hungry because their families could not afford
nutritious meals, we created the National School Lunch
Program. Today, this program feeds more than 30 million
American children, often at little or no charge. When
we work together, we can overcome any obstacle and
protect our Nation's most precious resource--our
children. As we take steps to turn around the epidemic
of childhood obesity, I am confident that we will solve
this problem together, and that we will solve it in a generation.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the
United States of America, by virtue of the authority
vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the
United States, do hereby proclaim September 2010 as
National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month. I encourage
all Americans to take action by learning about and
engaging in activities that promote healthy eating and
greater physical activity by all of our Nation's children.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this
first day of September, in the year of our Lord two
thousand ten, and of the Independence of the United
States of America the two hundred and thirty-fifth.
(Presidential Sig.)
[FR Doc. 2010-22590
Filed 9-7-10; 11:15 am]
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