On behalf of Active Healthy Kids Canada and the pediatric exercise science community in Canada, thank you for the opportunity to be here and thank you to this committee for tackling this important issue. We look forward to working with you to help advance the resolution of this problem.
You should have a package of slides. A lot of them I will go through quickly, and that explains why you have the other items to help you digest the material later on.
You have a short-form report card, which I will speak to in the second half of my presentation, and a long-form report card, which provides all of the scientific background and explanation for how the grades for the short-form report card got there. So I won't spend a lot of time going through that in detail. That's all there for your reading.
You may also have a sheet that draws you to our web page, where this information in both languages is available for download if you need other copies.
So I'm going to go through the slides if that helps you follow along. There are four main points.
The first point I want to get across is that often institutional-based and somewhat ecologically invalid or artificial approaches to dealing with a problem are probably not sufficient in order to optimize the health of children and maintain healthy body weights. I'll elaborate on that a bit.
My second point is on data quality, and Cora spoke to a fair bit of data. Ian will also speak to data, some of which is either contradictory or doesn't seem to make much sense in the world we live in. So I want to draw a few examples about data quality and about how our frame of reference as it adjusts over time affects our data quality.
I want to present the Active Healthy Kids Canada report card findings, which I believe consolidates the information that you're looking for in this committee into one tight package, and then go through some recommendations.
Nature deficit disorder is this concept that our younger generation, and increasingly ourselves, are drifting away from the outdoors, and that has implications because it makes us less active. This is captured nicely in a quote from Last Child in the Woods: “I like to play indoors better because that's where all the electrical outlets are.”
This is a different frame of reference for kids today from when I was a child, certainly.
And continuing on:
Ironically, the childhood obesity epidemic has coincided with a dramatic increase in children's organized sport. This does not mean that organized sports contributes to obesity, but that an over-scheduled, over-organized childhood may....
From a different thought leader:
Recreation has gone from spontaneous to organized and regimented activity: parents exercise at the gym while the young play soccer and hockey in leagues with schedules rather than in the backyard or the street in front. More time is often spent preparing for and getting there rather than on the activity itself.
Perhaps we've lost touch a little bit.
To try to investigate this experimentally in my lab, we've tried to look at groups that have preserved traditional agrarian lifestyles, and compared them to contemporary-living kids. We've studied Old Order Mennonites and the Amish populations that exist in Canada. When we do this we find remarkable differences: about one-eighth as much prevalent obesity in the Amish as there is in our kids; one-quarter as many are overweight. This is very reflective of what life might have been like in the late 1800s among contemporary society in Canada.
If we look at their physical activity levels and monitor them directly, minute by minute, by putting accelerometers on kids, we find that probably not too surprisingly to you, Old Order Mennonite and Amish kids are much more active than your kids and my kids, no matter what variable you look at. They achieve this despite the fact that they have no physical education in their school structure at all, they have no institutionalized sports structure in their community, and many of them live below the poverty level.
If you were to attend a think-tank on childhood obesity, those would be the first things that will come on the table. We need better physical and health education, I agree. We need better infrastructure for municipal sport, I agree. And it's an issue of income. Well, these segments of society that reflect life of a time gone by, before nature deficit disorder, before we've withdrawn from the outdoors to the indoors, were able to prevent the problems we are dealing with today. This is something to reflect on.
I've also provided a slide on step counts that we've done on these kids as well. If you recall the numbers that Cora was presenting, the numbers from the Amish kids are remarkably higher than the numbers of typical Canadian children.
I will add that in early May, when we did this experiment and were testing these kids, it happened that we had a freak week of snow. Despite the fact that weather was working seriously against that study, it showed that step counts from that group were among the highest in the developed world. That is one issue.
The second issue is whether our frame of reference is changing and how that might affect data quality. I show the picture of the car trying to squeeze into the parking lot there. Has the distance that we allow ourselves to walk, that we allow our children to walk--to the corner store, to the park, and so on--drifted downwards over time? Has the distance that we would walk to the corner store as a child changed? I believe it has.
In the next slide the child never seems to find time to exercise. Beside that slide I show data from 350 kids. We have minute-by-minute accelerometry-measured movement counts on these kids. It shows that all these kids have six hours or more per day of non-movement, of sedentary time. They do have time to exercise. Their frame of reference about what exercise is, what physical activity is, and how much of it is appropriate has, I think, drifted down over time.
We look at trends in households with entertainment equipment that promotes sedentary behaviour. You see a bunch of lines in this slide. You can see that in the last generation we have almost saturated every home in the country with two or more TVs, DVDs and VCRs, computers in the home, high speed Internet in the home, cable or satellite TV in the home. Only one of those lines goes down, and that is the proportion of homes in the country that have only one television.
This is a big change in a very short period of time, and this screen invasion makes it very difficult to collect data. When we were children, we had one television in the home. It was in the family room. It was pretty easy for mom and dad to know when you watched too much TV; that was the only location you could do it. It was also easier, I think, at that time for mom and dad to fill out a questionnaire from the Canadian Fitness and Lifestyle Research Institute that said how much screen time their kids were having, because there was one.
It is not that way any more. I have four children, and we have a lot of screens in our home. I can tell you that our kids don't watch more than one hour of TV in the family room, where I can see them, but we also have a TV in the basement. We have two computers in the home. We don't have Game Boys and so on, but most families do. If it's only one hour on each of them, now you have six hours a day, yet mom or dad might be reporting one hour a day on the questionnaire. This is the big problem for data quality.
It is similar with the our size and our body composition. Most Canadian adults are overweight now. That is our frame of reference. The average, normal person, the one you don't get very concerned about, is overweight. The reality is that the pathophysiology, the medical complications, and the health issues don't give a darn about what normal was; they give a darn about what the overload to the body is, what the challenges to the body are, and how that body adapts. This is a problem, I think, as we go on.
The last slide on page 3 brings some data to this. Around the same time that we did one of the waves of the national longitudinal survey of children and youth, Ipsos Reid did a poll, a random sample of parents in the country. The poll asked the parents if they had an overweight or obese child. When StatsCan does a survey, you should end up with numbers fairly similar. What I show there is what comes out from the Ipsos Reid poll asking the parents: 12% say they have an overweight child; 0% say have an obese child. By chance, those numbers should be 27% and 12%--an enormous difference.
We are all wearing rose-coloured glasses, and again, the health outcomes come from the realities there--not what we perceive, not what we want of our kids, but what's actually there.
Further to the data quality issue, we don't have--except for what Cora presented on that pedometer stuff--nationally representative, directly measured physical activity data in the country. Statistics Canada is working on that, and we will have it in a few years; the U.S. now has it and just released the information in June. In the slide, I show that when you compare self-report physical activity, the proportion of Americans who meet the guidelines identified in the Surgeon General's report is around 32%. When you put a monitor on people and actually measure what they do, that 32% goes to 3%--a tenfold error in there.
That may help to explain some of the studies that don't show as strong a relationship between physical activity and health as we might expect to find, because we don't have data that actually reflects the movement of people.
The next two slides I won't get into in detail. They show accelerometer information from my lab as well. They show the way we can manipulate the numbers, depending on how we analyze. These next two graphs show the same data analyzed in different ways; they are all valid ways of analyzing things, but they basically show that anywhere from 100% to 0% of kids meet physical activity guidelines, depending on how you look at the data.
And this is my plea: We have very transparent data analyses and data presentations because it's not the statistics we present to Parliament, or that you can claim credit for, that make a difference in the lives of kids. It's changing their behaviour. So let's pick a standard, a robust analysis method, and go with it over time.
I'm here as chair of Active Healthy Kids Canada, which has a vision of a nation of active, healthy kids, and a mission to inspire the nation to engage all children and youth in physical activity. The strategic goals of the organization are to make physical activity a significant priority in the everyday lives of Canadian families, and to provide expertise and direction to policy-makers and the public on increasing and effectively allocating resources and attention toward physical activity for children and youth. This is exactly what we're all about.
Active Healthy Kids Canada is the trusted source for powering the movement to get kids moving. One of our main activities is to produce an annual report card on how we're doing, holding us all accountable for where the rubber hits the road. Are we actually making a difference in the lives of children?
The report card is a research-based communication and advocacy piece, designed to provide insight into Canada's state of the nation each year, on how as a country we're responsible for providing physical activity opportunities for children and youth. You see last year's report card, dropping the ball with an overall grade of D. That's available on the web. I didn't provide it to you. And this year's report card, released in May, again a D grade. I'm not going to go through all the grades here; you've got them in detail.
But we assess a number of parameters we believe are important in influencing the likelihood of children and youth being physically active. Different indicators of physical activity--and you can see there for screen time and organized sport and unorganized sport participation--Cora spoke to this as well. Family indicators: all in the D range. Very disturbing things: only 36% of parents regularly engage in physical activity with their children, and a third of them never do, or at least report they never engage in physical activity with their kids. Not good enough.
School and community indicators are there. You see some “incompletes” as well. Again, there is tremendous data need. As the problem gets worse and worse, we need to understand in finer and finer detail what the source of the problem is. And in the built environment and physical activity at school, we have very poor data in Canada, no really good surveillance and ongoing mechanisms to collect those data.
Perhaps relevant to this group, we gave a C-minus grade in the policy area. We released the report card not too long after the election, so we hedged our bets a little bit. But the party in power now had committed 1% of the federal health budget toward physical activity. We're still waiting to see exactly how that will unfold. The tax credit is starting to come in, and we, among others, have been contacted by the group, investigating how those tax incentives should work. So there's some activity there, relative to the importance and the prevalence of the public health issue--insufficient. And there are some health indicators there as well.
The media impressions for our report card exceeded 40 million last year. This is a big issue for people. We are overwhelmed with requests to get this information because it consolidates it into a tight package and doesn't force people to go to the literature. It far exceeds our capability as an organization to respond, but does give an idea of what parents and advocates are concerned about.
Active Healthy Kids Canada was established about 12 years ago. We're a national organization with a passionate voice for the development of active, healthy kids in Canada. I've given you the website.
I want to close by putting in a plug for ParticipAction. This second-last slide was in the newspaper in Saint John earlier this week. There's chatter in different hallways about a potential resurrection. This would speak to Cora's recommendation that we bring a consolidated, strong voice, a communication strategy, a social marketing strategy for Canada.
My recommendations:
We need better surveillance and audits of what we do because far too many programs are claiming wonderful credit when they're not actually changing the lives of kids. This is very frustrating when you start to monitor health outcomes and you don't see the changes you think you should. A good example, in Ontario and Alberta, is the daily physical activity program. For those of you who have kids in Ontario now, if they're in elementary school, ask them every day if they had 20 minutes of physical activity above and beyond their physical education. That's what's mandated in this province right now. I have four kids that fall into that category. Most days they don't get it.
I have a high degree of confidence that the provincial government is going to claim that this was a tremendous success, when it didn't happen and it didn't change the lives of kids. There won't be lower levels of obesity, because we didn't audit it. We didn't check to see that it's actually making a difference.
We need enhanced physical and health education programs.
We need comprehensive social marketing and a communications strategy, which we don't have in the country at the moment.
We need better possibilities and support for the NGOs. Cora's budget usually comes in, if it comes in at all, halfway through the next year. Active Healthy Kids Canada has never received a dollar, despite asking every year in its 13-year history, from the federal government. There is no mechanism to support us, and we can't respond to the constituents in an adequate way.
We need funding for a healthy living strategy, which was signed off and finalized in 2003. It was the previous government, but it's all there. The work was done. We don't have that in place.
We need improved and changed infrastructure, and we need to commonly have health impact assessments when we're changing our built environment.
We need additional research, and we need the federal government not to fund everything but certainly to show leadership.
Thank you.