Posts Tagged ‘health care costs’

Health Care, Physical Education & Physical Activity

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

By John Kruse

I’ve recently advocated that more quality physical education can help in the prevention of excessive health care costs.   Today, I found an interview with Newt Gingrich.  In it, he explains the importance of physical education, nutrition and physical activity in attempting to  curb health care costs.

Q: What should be the approach on health care?

A: I think you need a totally new approach. I think you need to start with the individual, you’ve got to focus on individual responsibility, on wellness, on early testing, on learning to manage chronic diseases. You have to focus on fundamental change.

We just got into a little argument in upstate New York on a school district that was going to block kids from riding their bicycle or walking (to school.) We wrote a letter and got in the middle of it and said this is exactly wrong, you want kids to walk to school, you want kids to ride their bikes to school. You want to have K through 12 physical education, you want to rethink the school lunch program and the school breakfast program so that it’s good food for diabetics.

Then you have to look at the delivery systems. You have two hospitals (in Wheeling.) You need to apply the Toyota production system model, the work of Drucker … the best systems in America are just amazingly effective and much less expensive. We have to move to that. We can’t afford to pay unnecessarily because we have to be able to compete with China and India and you cannot do that if you start out every morning with a multi-billion dollar burden.

Read the rest of the interview here.  Unfortuntely, the above quote is the extent of the interview having to do with physical education and health care.  In any case, its good to see a politician advocating for what we do.

Health Care Reform, Nutrition & Physical Education

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

By John Kruse

My interest in the current debate on health care reform has me surfing the Internet lately in an attempt to learn the latest information.  In doing so, I came across a very interesting article by Dr. Frank Lipman in the Huffington Post.   The title of the article is “True Health Reform–10 Missing Pieces.”  In this article Dr. Lipman suggests that Washington is “barking up the wrong tree.”

They’re busy arguing about what amounts to health insurance reform, while what this country needs is true health care reform.

The readers of this blog will find it interesting that of the 10 missing pieces listed by Dr. Lipman, three relate directly to physical education and nutrition in the schools.

Dr. Lipman’s number one missing piece is “invest in educating the public in self care.”  As physical education teachers and health teachers, we specialize in this.  Health related fitness is a reoccurring theme in our state content standards and health teachers specialize in prevention and making correct decisions.  This leads me to believe that more money should be spent in physical education and health.  Perhaps a federal stimulus package for physical education and health could save this country more in the long run instead of bailing out corporations that just don’t get it.

“Educating doctors and other health care practitioners in nutrition, exercise, stress reduction techniques and natural remedies” is number three on Dr. Lipman’s list.  I’d like to think that physical educators and health educators are health care practitioners.  This means that money should be spent on professional development that is sustained over time, standards based and meets the needs of students.

Number seven on Dr. Lipman’s list is “feed our children healthily and educate them responsibly.”  I wholeheartedly agree with this one.  I’m appalled at what I see being served to children at my school.   School lunches need a serious overhaul.

Serve fresh unprocessed food for school lunches, food that’s nutritious instead of just cheap and convenient. Eliminate junk food and soda vending machines from all schools (and while we are at it, from all public buildings and airports).

In addition, Dr. Lipman addresses physical education directly in this one.

Don’t eliminate physical education programs from the schools as is happening now with budget cuts.

While we’re at it, I’d like to add that much of this country needs to reduce physical education class sizes.

Finally, Dr. Lipman’s conclusion hits the nail on the head.

Focusing only on how people can get access to costly disease treatment, without having the more important discussion about how lifestyle changes can be implemented to prevent these diseases in the first place, is like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. We will simply be perpetuating a flawed and costly health care model. For the sake of not only our personal health, but also for the financial health of the nation, we must address the causes that underlie the prevalence of chronic disease that we are experiencing. Unless we address why people are getting sick or the underlying mechanisms of their illnesses, our system will lack a solid foundation. Unless we change our disease care model to a true health care system, we are bound to both overpay and underachieve in the long run.

To read the article, click here.

Other health care reform articles on FitMet:

Health Care Reform and Obesity

More on Health Care Reform & Obesity–How Do We Reduce Costs?

More on Health-Care Reform & Obesity–How Do We Reduce Costs?

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

By John Kruse

My last post on health-care reform and obesity discussed the overwhelming costs of obesity. No matter what we do in terms of health-care reform, the cost of obesity is going to hurt this country.

This interview on Fox News brings up some interesting points about how we can reduce the costs of health-care instead of trying to pay for everything. I’d like to add that perhaps we can reduce the cost of obesity in the long run by investing in physical education now.