Teaming up with professional mixed martial artists, a celebrity fitness trainer and a dietician from Jacobi Medical Center, Assemblywoman Naomi Rivera has set out to tackle childhood obesity in her new “Fight the Bulge” campaign.
The obesity epidemic has replaced smoking as the leading killer of Americans, Rivera said in a press release, and Hispanic children are particularly at risk: nearly half of Latinos born after the year 2000 will develop diabetes, a recent study estimates.
On Oct. 10, Rivera hosted an educational forum at Bronx House, on Pelham Parkway, to discuss the risks associated with an unhealthy lifestyle and the best tactics for combating obesity. In attendance were personal trainer Donovan Green, nutritionist Dr. Gloria Brent of Jacobi Medical Center, and UFC professional fighters Nick Pace and Louis “Good Night” Gaudinot.
Each speaker circled back to the urgent need for education on healthy eating and exercise, a message that schools and doctors’ offices should be preaching as well, Rivera said. Brent discussed how to properly read a nutrition label; Pace and Gaudinot led a martial arts demonstration.
Days before the event, Rivera participated in a nationwide online webcast about obesity with State Sen. Andrew Lanza, of Great Kills, New York.
“Childhood obesity has long term effects,” Lanza said during the panel discussion. “We stand to be witness to the first generation of Americans who may not be as healthy and live as long as their parents.”
Medicare is asking for comments on a proposal to include obesity counseling. Would you use the service? See the Visiting Nurse Service of New York’s research blog about the idea. http://bit.ly/vijKA7