Infographic Template Galleries

Created with Fabric.js 1.4.5 Childhood Obesity Increasing Physical Activity Find time every day to participate in some kind of physical activity The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recommends that young people aged 6-17 years participate in at least 60 minutes of physical activity daily (CDC) Join more activities, teams, or clubs that are based around physical activity Schools work with community organizations to provide out-of-school-time physical activity programs and share physical activity facilities (CDC) Use in-school-time wisely with physical activity.Participate in what is offered for you there Schools promote physical activity through comprehensive school physical activity programs, including; recess, classroom-based physical activity, intramural physical activity clubs, interscholastic sports, and physical education (CDC) double click to changethis text! Drag a cornerto scale proportionally. double click to changethis text! Drag a cornerto scale proportionally. double click to changethis text! Drag a cornerto scale proportionally. double click to changethis text! Drag a cornerto scale proportionally. double click to change this header text! double click to changethis text! Drag a cornerto scale proportionally. double click to changethis text! Drag a cornerto scale proportionally. double click to change this title text! double click to changethis text! Drag a cornerto scale proportionally. Get educated on the risks of not maintaining regular physical activity double click to changethis text! Drag a cornerto scale proportionally. Some risks include; more likely to get diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, asthma, arthritis, and poor health status (CDC) Get educated on the benefits of maintaining regular physical activity Some benefits include; healthy bones and muscles, reduces feelings of depression or anxiety, can improve academic performance, and promotes healthy lifestyles (CDC) In 2012, more than one-third of children and adolescents were overweight or obese (CDC)
Create Your Free Infographic!