Body Healthy. Soul Happy.

Fuel your body, change your life!

About Me

As the owner of White Oak Nutrition, I, and my team, are consultants, guides, friends and cheerleaders for people who are serious about getting healthy and living the best, most fun-filled life they can! I also coach nutrition enthusiasts who want to open their own club and create a wall of financial security around themselves and their families.

Archive for the ‘Children's Health’ Category

Boy Scouts Impose More Controversial Rules

Written by Kim on Aug 27th, 2009 | Filed under: Children's Health

ABC news reported that the Boy Scouts of America have enacted new rules that bar overweight parent volunteers, fat_boy_scoutScout Masters and even Scouts themselves from participating in any adventure that places them more than 30 minutes away from a medical facility by ground travel. In order to be allowed to go on these adventure trips all participants must meet standardized weight guidelines, which according to the Boy Scouts of America, are based on federal guidelines. All participants who are going on a trip lasting more than 72 hours are required to have a medical evaluation prior to the trip’s start. Additionally, local BSA councils will be allowed to impose their own set of weight restrictions ad hoc. The BSA purportedly enacted the new rules to “ensure the safety of participants.”

But at what point does it become discrimination? According to a 2009 study by the Centers for Disease Control, the number of overweight children has doubled in the past three decades. 16% of kids ages 6-19 are considered overweight and an additional 15% are at high risk of becoming overweight. What if one of these kids were yours. Would you want them to miss out on being a Scout because of their weight? Would you want them to endure the ridicule of being allowed to be a Scout but having to stay home from the season’s big trip because of their weight? As a parent active in your child’s troop, how would you feel about being told that you can’t chaperone or assist in your child’s merit badge activity because of your weight?

These are questions that we’re going to have to grapple with and I’d like to know your opinion. Please comment below.

If you, or your family is struggling with weight, please consider contacting me privately at kim at slimcinnati dot com. I am a trained wellness coach and have dedicated my career to helping families and individuals incorporate healthy eating into busy lifestyles. My clients have fun, lose weight and best of all; live healthier lives filled with energy, vitality and increased self esteem. 

To your good health,

Kim


It’s Not About Tonsils Anymore

Written by Kim on Aug 4th, 2009 | Filed under: Children's Health, Uncategorized

Even 2-3 years ago, if your child snored or had trouble breathing while sleeping, the Ear, Nose and Throat doctor automatically urged you to have your child’s tonsils removed. For decades, it was assumed that enlarged tonsils were the leading cause of sleep dyspnea. 

But that thinking is being strongly challenged.  Researchers at Penn State recently published the results of a study involving 700 randomly chosen children, none of whom were previously treated for sleeping difficulty, in the medical journal Sleep.

Findings show that about a quarter of the children had mild or moderate sleep-disordered breathing. Tonsil size was not associated with disordered breathing, and nasal abnormalities were a factor only in mild cases.

But waist circumference and body mass index were strong independent risk factors for snoring and other breathing problems during sleep. “This is another red flag related to obesity, another reason to be concerned,” said Edward O. Bixler, a professor of psychiatry at Penn State who led the research. “The metabolic issues in adults associated with obesity are now beginning to be found in younger children.”

 2010cartoonobesity_gallery__403x400-420x0Several additional studies have recently shown that obesity in expectant moms also increases the risk of asthma in infants and children.

Coupled together, weight is quickly becoming one of the greatest threats to our children’s ability to live a long, happy and healthy life. Unlike which genes we pass along, how our children’s cells organize during gestation or even what germs our kids are exposed to, we can control what we eat and what they eat. 

I often wonder how many studies will have to be published and how many children and their parents will have to suffer before our culture changes and begins to make healthy nutrition a real priority. When will we finally begin to see that the food we eat and the lifestyles we lead are actually reducing life expectancy instead of increasing it?

Below are three easy tips you can use today to make a change for yourself and your family. Pass them along and take a stand for your health and the health of those you love!

1. Replace white potatoes in your meals with cauliflower (which can be whipped up and tastes just like mashed potatoes) or use sweet potatoes which have many more nutrients (like beta carotene) than Idaho potatoes.

2. Play active games with your kids especially games like Wii sports or Dance Dance Revolution. These are games that many kids love and you’re likely to love too and studies have shown that playing these games for 40 minutes provides the same benefit as “traditional” exercise.

3. Consider supplementing your meals and your child’s meals with a high quality nutritional shake like Herbalife’s Formula One. These delicious shakes (which can be made with real fruit) offer perfectly balanced nutrition, are quick to make and are great for families who are always on-the-go. There are even kid tested and approved, great tasting, healthy snacks designed especially for your child’s growing body!

If you’d like more tips about how you and your family can live body healthy and soul happy, email me at kvkr2 at aol dot com.