UCSF Medical Center Search UCSF About UCSF UCSF home page UCSF home page News Archive / UCSF Center for Obesity Assessment, Study&Treatment (COAST)
COAST COAST COAST COAST COAST COAST COAST COAST COAST
COAST COAST COAST COAST
COAST - Main Page
COAST COAST COAST COAST COAST COAST COAST COAST COAST
Navigation Menu Home Events Clinics Research Faculty Contact Resources Navigation Menu

HOME
> About COAST

> News
> News Archive
COAST
> HOME
> Clinics
> Research
> Faculty
> Contact
> Resources


UCSF Experts Featured in Sunday Magazine


Friday, January 13, 2006

UCSF nutrition, pediatrics and endocrinology experts are featured in a special magazine supplement to be distributed in the home delivery edition of the New York Times on Sunday, Jan. 15.

The magazine, “Childhood Obesity,” is the product of a unique collaboration among UCSF, Kaiser Permanente and UCLA and is aimed at educating the public about the emerging crisis of obesity – and giving people specific things they can do about it.

Obesity frequently begins in childhood, and obesity rates among California children are alarmingly high: More than one of every four children in grades 5, 7 and 9 are overweight or obese, according to a recent study. That’s 9 million obese children at risk for more serious health risks as they grow into adulthood.

Featured in the publication are:

Robert B. Baron, Director of the UCSF Adult Weight Management Program

Andrea Garber, Coordinator of the UCSF Children’s Hospital WATCH clinic

• Stephen Gitelman, Director of the Pediatric Diabetes Clinic

Melvin B. Heyman, Chief of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition

• School of Medicine, Dean David Kessler

Robert H. Lustig, Director of the Weight Assessment for Teen and Child Health (WATCH) Clinic at UCSF Children’s Hospital

Laurel Mellin, Associate Clinical Professor of Family and Community Medicine

• Colette O’Brien, Nurse Practitioner in the Pediatric Diabetes Clinic

“Smoking is still the No. 1 preventable cause of death in the United States, but obesity is not far behind,” says Kessler. “If you look at the range of medical conditions that obesity affects, it is truly astonishing – diabetes, elevated cholesterol, high blood pressure, stroke, gallbladder disease, asthma, osteoarthritis, and many cancers.”

The publication, which will reach more than 150,000 homes in California, includes articles about nutrition education, ways for families to increase physical activity, and a discussion on the policy and research needed to stem the rising numbers of obese children in our communities.

Members of the UCSF community who want a free copy of the magazine may call the School of Medicine Dean’s Office at 415-476-2342 or email Josh Marx. Requests for larger quantities for distribution to patients or members of the community are also welcome.

Source:

Doug Levy

 

Home | Events | Clinics | Research | Faculty | Contact | Resources
Copyright 2009The Regents of the University of California