Students encouraged to adopt healthy lifestyles
THE Ministry of Education and Youth says it remains committed to encouraging and promoting healthy nutrition and regular exercise among students to minimise the incidence of obesity.
This assurance comes from portfolio Minister Fayval Williams, who noted research indicating the prevalence of obesity among individuals, particularly youngsters.
Speaking during activities marking National School Moves Day at Ferncourt High in St Ann on April 29, Williams said data from a 2017 Global School Health Survey showed that 65 per cent of children 13 to 17 years were overweight while 26 per cent were considered obese.
She further referenced the findings of a 2016-2017 Jamaica Health and Lifestyle Survey which, she said, indicated that one in two, or 54 per cent, of overall Jamaicans were pre-obese or obese.
Williams said healthy lifestyle habits, such as being physically active and eating well, have proven to yield long-term dividends, adding that good nutrition is “one of the cornerstones for enhancing learning”.
She noted that over the years the ministries of education and health and wellness have partnered to develop polices and public education programmes tailored to provide more nutritious options for youngsters from the early childhood to high school levels.
The minister said parents as well as teachers and school administrators have been engaged in the process, “in recognition of [the fact that] there must be a holistic approach in addressing this challenge (obesity)”.
Williams said while hereditary and cultural norms were among the factors rendering children more susceptible to developing obesity, changes in lifestyle habits have also been influential.
As such, she welcomed this year’s staging of the National School Moves Day Initiative.
This the minister said, “against the background of us coming out of the more serious effects of the pandemic and [the resulting] reduced physical activity and physical exercise programmes that children normally engage in while at school, and even in their communities”.
Williams said the initiative, which forms part of the Jamaica Moves in Schools Programme, aims to encourage children to be physically active, and provides an opportunity to demonstrate the importance of doing so.