Skip to content
  • Sponsors
  • Sponsorship Opportunities
  • The Connecticut Health I-Team
  • Contact
Donate Now
  • Donate Now
  • C-HIT
  • C-HIT
  • Veterans’ Health
  • Environmental Health
  • Women’s Health
  • Disparities
  • Fines & Sanctions
  • Donate Now
  • Global Navigation
    • Sponsors
    • Sponsorship Opportunities
    • The Connecticut Health I-Team
    • Contact

Connecticut Health Investigative Team - In-depth Journalism on Issues of Health and Safety

Connecticut Health Investigative Team (https://c-hit.org/tag/all-my-kin/)

  • Veterans’ Health
  • Environmental Health
  • Women’s Health
  • Disparities
  • Fines & Sanctions
  • I-Team In-Depth
  • News Ticker
  • Data Mine
  • Students’ Work
  • Podcast
  • Health Q&A
Subscribe

All My Kin

Childhood Obesity

Study Sees Key Role For Child Care Workers In Curbing Obesity

By Jennifer LaRue | December 13, 2015

Family-based day care workers can be powerful allies in the state’s battle to curb childhood obesity by influencing diets and physical activities, says new research from the University of Connecticut. Childhood obesity has emerged as one of the most serious and widespread health threats in the United States. Nationally, 17 percent of children ages 2 to 19 (about 1 in 6) are overweight or obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The obesity problem is particularly acute among Hispanic children. In Connecticut, for example, 16.7 percent of Hispanic children ages 2 to 5 participating in the Women, Infants and Children (WIC) program were overweight and 18 percent were obese, compared to non-Hispanic black children (13.6 percent overweight, 14.2 percent obese) or non-Hispanic white children (14.5 percent overweight, 13.5 percent obese), according to 2011 data.

  • Connecticut Health I-Team
  • The Connecticut Health I-Team
  • Sponsors
  • Contributors
  • Contact

In Case You Missed It

  • ‘One Way or Another, COVID Will Get You:’ Uninfected Yet Greatly Affected

    On a bustling Friday morning, the aroma of rice and beans wafts through a cloud of hairspray in Romy’s Beauty Salon in Meriden.

  • Dancing Again: COVID-19 Battle Gives Survivor A New Appreciation For Life

    Michael Kelly is still fighting.

Follow Us

Like Us on FacebookFollow Us on TwitterFollow Us on InstagramSubscribe via RSS

© Copyright 2023, Connecticut Health I-Team

  • Site Policies

Built with the Largo WordPress Theme from the Institute for Nonprofit News.

Back to top ↑