The “Let’s Move” campaign is Michelle Obama’s initiative to curb the childhood obesity epidemic in the United States. According to the campaign website, its goals include “creating a healthy start for children” by empowering their parents and caregivers, providing healthy food in schools, improving access to healthy, affordable foods, and increasing physical activity. Here is an example of the kind of “social marketing” that the campaign is releasing:
This campaign video is particularly notable for 1) its raced, classed, and gendered assumptions about the responsibility for promoting physical activity among young people; 2) the way it emphasizes personal responsibility while ignoring structural determinants of health; and 3) its Foucauldian implications (for the real social science nerds out there).
First, the video portrays a middle-aged white mother (in the kitchen, no less) who encourages her daughter to get exercise by having her running around their (apparently large, middle-class suburban) home in order to find the $1 she asked for. It ends by stating: “Moms everywhere are finding ways to keep kids healthy.” Not only does this assume that “moms” (not “parents”) have responsibility for keeping their kids healthy through intensive mothering practices, it fails to account for the fact that the childhood obesity epidemic (itself a social construct in many ways) is greatly stratified by race and socio-economic status. It is not clear to the viewer how they might encourage their children to exercise if they live, say, in a small apartment or a neighborhood without safe places for kids to play outside.
Second, a growing body of research points to the fact that structural-level inequalities, not individual-level health behaviors, account for the majority of poor health outcomes. This research illuminates a disconnect in most health promotion initiatives — people have personal responsibility (engage in physical activity) for structural problems (poverty; the high price of nutritious food; safe, well-lit, violence-free places for kids to play).
Finally, the video illustrates what some social scientists have noted about new forms of power in modern public health practice — for example, health promotion campaigns such as this one can be thought of as the exercise of “biopower,” or Foucault’s term for the control of populations through the body: health professionals and/or the government are entitled by scientific knowledge/power to examine, intervene, and prescribe “healthy lifestyles.” In this example, the campaign uses marketing strategies to remind the (very narrowly defined) audience of their duty to engage with dominant health messages and concerns (i.e., childhood obesity) through the control of bodies (that is, their children’s).
In the “Let’s move” campaign video, then, we see that (white, middle-class) moms have a responsibility for encouraging their children to get physical activity without an acknowledgement of the gendered expectations of caregiving, structural determinants of health that effect childhood obesity, and the implications of top-down control of the body.
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Christie Barcelos is a doctoral student in Public Health/Community Health Education at the University of Massachusetts Amherst where she studies social justice and health, critical pedagogy, and epistemology in health promotion.
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Comments 38
Anonymous — August 8, 2011
Another observation: the implication here is that the mom has to trick her child into getting exercise. Her pocketbook is right next to her, but she pretends that she doesn't know where it is and sends her daughter all over the house. Is deceit the only way to get kids to exercise? Is it okay for parents to "find ways" to combat unhealthy lifestyles like this?
Yrro Simyarin — August 8, 2011
Is there really so much pushback for emphasizing personal responsibility? Being poor in general is much less something that a parent can change than trying to prioritize healthy food (which can be cheap beans and frozen or canned vegetables - it doesn't have to be expensive fresh organic produce) or exercise (such as encouraging participation in school sports). Few people in the US are at the pure subsistence level... and if they were, they wouldn't be obese.
Looking at obesity from a structural standpoint makes sense from someone making policy judgments, or on how to allocate charity funds to stop it, or when trying to identify a root cause for sociological purposes... but propaganda like this is attacking from the cultural angle. A parent can't really do much with "your kid is fat because you're poor"... the only actionable solution to that is "stop being poor." Whereas a message like "we should consider exercise and good eating to be important" can make waves from individual action.Not that I *really* expect this specific video to do much good in that direction.
Moudou — August 8, 2011
Those framing 'anti obesity' policy should go undercover and live in low income neighbourhoods-for a year or more-and make their notions whilst holding down some hard job standing on your feet all day, that doesn't necessarily make you sweat. Come home cook from scratch and all that. Then find time to make their tired bodies waste calories.
At least they'd gain some insight.
Heatherleila — August 8, 2011
The girl´s comment ´There are no more closets [because there were multiple closets for me to look in]` was it for me. They used the large size of the house to get the point across, but a house like that is also a symbol of great wealth.
While I don´t have a problem with the Let´s Move campaign in general, or in trying to change family eating/exercise habits for the better, it does get tiring to hear people call obesity an issue of lifestyle choices, instead of an issue of social determinants of health.
I watched this clip from Glenn Beck a while ago which really demonstrates the vitriol that public health campaigns provoke in some people who believe all health issues are due to personal choices, and not due to circumstances beyond the control of the individual. Around 3:10 Beck goes on a rant about Doritos making people fat. It´s pretty awful.
http://heatherleila3.blogspot.com/2010/11/office-of-majority-health.html
Lucylangston — August 8, 2011
Could you provide an academic reference for your second point. I'm not disagreeing just working on something about personal responsibility for health risks and would appreciate the reference.
Thanks
holizz — August 8, 2011
Just so you know, the term "obesity epidemic" outside of scare quotes is offensive. In future please use "fat rampage". Thank you.
Anonymous — August 8, 2011
As mentioned before, the whole idea of a mother "having ways" to get what she wants is an interestign phenomenon, especially when you put it together with "having ways" to get your husband to do what you want (not pictured here, but a friend of mine went off on this way of thinking yesterday, and the similarities are striking). Of course it ties into the notion of women as manipulative, but the key seems to be that she not only *is* manipulative, but she *has to be*. There is no difference in tone between her manipulation of a child and manipulation of her husband, so it seems to be the same sort of dynamic: a woman doesn't have any direct power even in her family! She doesn't just tell her daughter to go out and play or enroll her in some activity program. The ad implies that she should instead think out way to "trick" her child into exercising every day, just like women in general aren't encouraged to ask their men do do something, they are encouraged to think out elaborate scemes to get them to do it on their own. It really says a lot about how low in the pecking order women really are in conservative circles.
Anonymous — August 8, 2011
The conversation in here is getting really disturbing. Are you seriously debating how to get those poor hapless poor people to adopt the middle class ideology of thinness while completely equating that middle class ideology with health. Way to miss the point of the post!
Willie — August 8, 2011
I think the video is just basically saying, "moms, you can be creative with getting your kids to be active." It ISN'T saying, "Only moms can help kids be active; we're only talking to and about upper-class white families with big houses." It's just not logical to assume that they're excluding everybody else. I mean, it actually doesn't follow the rules of logic. Yeah, the campaign as exemplified in the video is kind of dumb because it doesn't show the full spectrum and frankly the reality of what's happening--I wish it did. but it doesn't mean it's denying what's happening. If a book doesn't include a black man as a character, does it mean it denies that black men exist?
on the other hand, because we know the power of advertising, it's safe to say that this ad is not very good because people aren't very good. what I mean to say is that their sort of "below-the-conscious-mind experiencer" that takes in all the sensory data around them will interpret this ad as saying "Only moms can help kids be active..." so maybe the problem is that too many people are being educated through ads.
Anonymous — August 11, 2011
That kid just expended the energy in about 1 Hershey's kiss. Good luck with that as a tactic.
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Let’s Move is Mom’s New Chore | The Med Diaries — March 3, 2014
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ivy michael — August 23, 2024
Tackling childhood obesity goes beyond individual efforts; it requires community-wide initiatives. While middle-class moms health care facilities can play a significant role by promoting healthier habits at home, lasting change demands broader access to nutrition education, affordable healthy foods, and inclusive programs that address all socioeconomic groups, not just one segment.