Hundreds
of years from now, mankind may look back at todays modern
medicine and think: How could they have been so
primitive in ideology and so wrong? What lack of humanitarianism
in government allowed the medical industries to kill people
with economically driven false beliefs and ideas? Why didnt
government stop them? Who were the people in charge of protecting
those citizens?
Every year, hundreds of thousands of people continue to die
needlessly due to conflicts of interest, tainted research,
greed for big bucks, pretentious doctors and scientists, lying,
cheating, invasion by the morally bankrupt marketing automatons
of the drug industry, derelict politicians and federal regulators
- all seasoned with huge doses of self-importance and foul
odor.
Today's society believes that health can be found in a pill.
It's a sad reality isn't it? But we invest billions of dollars
into drugs and research, and the decline in health is epidemically
on the rise every year, with the return on this investment
being profoundly poor. More and more people do not have the
energy they need to get through the day while millions of
others are suffering with painful crippling diseases because
they have violated basic health principles.
Negative health and lifestyle choices are massive contributors
to the proliferation of chronic disease due mostly to a general
lack of knowledge. There is a desperate need for people to
start making wiser and more responsible health and lifestyle
decisions for themselves and their families.
If lawmakers were to hold the public accountable for their
own health, and use preventive education as a weapon against
the war on chronic disease, they would inevitably propel
human health way beyond its current limitations.
Preventable
illness makes up approximately 80 percent of the burden of
illness and accounts for eight of the nine leading categories
of death. Cardiovascular
disease, cancer and diabetes are examples of preventable yet
leading causes of death in Canada and the U.S.
Obesity is one of the largest contributors to preventable
illness and convincing evidence links it to six out of the
nine leading categories of death. More than half of people
(including children) in Canada and the U.S. are overweight
or obese and have a least two risk factors for heart disease.
The limitation of current approaches to combat obesity may,
in part, contribute to the problem. For example, school-based
and community-based programs might not be particularly efficacious.
Most dietary interventions focus on reduction of fat intake,
even though dietary fat might not be an important cause of
obesity. Very few studies have ever addressed the effect of
dietary composition on bodyweight, physical activity, and
behavioural modification techniques combined.
With respect to exercise and
physical activity, many studies have used conventional programmed
exercise prescriptions, although increasing lifestyle activity
or reducing sedentary behaviours might be better for long-term
weight control.
Physical education curriculums in schools designed to create
exercise environments that only mesh with sport or competition
have isolated several groups of children who are uncomfortable,
uncoordinated or lack the athletic ability to enjoy these
events. For many of these children, this reality becomes a
conditioned reinforcer instilling a behavior which dissuades
many of them from pursuing physical activity programs in their
teens and then in adulthood.
Moreover, a plethora of school-based programs still emphasize
non-locomotor and manipulative skills for physical education
which are very poor indicators in maintaining human health.
Motor skills such as speed, strength and power which are integrated
with cardiovascular abilities have consistently shown to improve
long-term health, yet an extremely large percentage of curriculums
fail to properly address or incorporate these skills. Kids
are just not getting the education and tools they need to
sustain healthy, active lifestyles well into their teens.
Preventive education
demands increased funding for research into new dietary, physical
activity, behavioural, socioeconomic, environmental and medical
approaches for the prevention of chronic disease. Children
who grow into teenagers and then adults require more accountability
for their own well-being through health conscious decisions
which are motivated by proper practical and theoretical applications.
Substantial political and financial contributions are also
imperative to invest in prevention more effectively to regulate
revisions and mandate policies which affect the governing
bodies of health and education. Any procrastination or failure
to resolve these matters in the next decade will only lead
to the further deterioration of human health and healthcare
systems. Proper leadership and effective communication regarding
these preventive meausures may still reverse this trend and
consequently promote a healthier aging population.
Further
Readings
For in-depth information on the prevention of chronic disease,
this
WHO release examines
the interrelationship between diet, nutrition, physical activity
and chronic disease.
Net
Reference 52,61,96,116
|