Introduction: Promoting sports in schools is a key strategy to address childhood obesity and raise awareness of the benefits of physical activity. The “Trofei di Milano Cortina 2026” initiative, in collaboration with Buzzi Children’s Hospital in Milan, launched a comprehensive school-based campaign to promote Olympism and healthy lifestyles. Methods: The initiative involved 350 schools across primary and lower secondary levels, offering free educational and sports activities in two phases: a year-long educational component followed by a final sports event. Educational materials, including an animated cartoon “Grandma Wilma’s Tales,” supported the EU-backed project on combating pediatric obesity and educating children on diabetes and cardiovascular risk. Results: Out of the targeted schools, 95 (27.1%) formally joined, involving 2.100 classes and 51.066 students aged 6 to 13. Participation in educational activities was substantial, with thousands of modules completed across five thematic areas, such as “Sport in a Video,” “Sustainability Champion,” and “Education 4.0.” The initiative engaged 312 teachers and included hospital school participation. The sporting phase registered 8,658 participants, nearly evenly split by gender. A network of 10 public and sports institutions, along with two sponsors, supported the program, highlighting the initiative’s wide-reaching impact and collaborative strength in fostering youth health and well-being. Conclusions: The data confirm the initiative’s success, highlighting strong community engagement and broad acceptance of the educational model. Integrating sport, values, and education proves to be an effective, scalable strategy for positively and collectively preventing childhood obesity.

Beyond sport to combat childhood obesity: educating, engaging, and preventing through an integrated school-based campaign grounded in the values of Olympism / G. Zuccotti, F.B. Ascani, A.F. Romeo, V. Calcaterra. - In: FRONTIERS IN ENDOCRINOLOGY. - ISSN 1664-2392. - 16:(2025 Jul 09), pp. 1636728.1-1636728.7. [10.3389/fendo.2025.1636728]

Beyond sport to combat childhood obesity: educating, engaging, and preventing through an integrated school-based campaign grounded in the values of Olympism

G. Zuccotti;
2025

Abstract

Introduction: Promoting sports in schools is a key strategy to address childhood obesity and raise awareness of the benefits of physical activity. The “Trofei di Milano Cortina 2026” initiative, in collaboration with Buzzi Children’s Hospital in Milan, launched a comprehensive school-based campaign to promote Olympism and healthy lifestyles. Methods: The initiative involved 350 schools across primary and lower secondary levels, offering free educational and sports activities in two phases: a year-long educational component followed by a final sports event. Educational materials, including an animated cartoon “Grandma Wilma’s Tales,” supported the EU-backed project on combating pediatric obesity and educating children on diabetes and cardiovascular risk. Results: Out of the targeted schools, 95 (27.1%) formally joined, involving 2.100 classes and 51.066 students aged 6 to 13. Participation in educational activities was substantial, with thousands of modules completed across five thematic areas, such as “Sport in a Video,” “Sustainability Champion,” and “Education 4.0.” The initiative engaged 312 teachers and included hospital school participation. The sporting phase registered 8,658 participants, nearly evenly split by gender. A network of 10 public and sports institutions, along with two sponsors, supported the program, highlighting the initiative’s wide-reaching impact and collaborative strength in fostering youth health and well-being. Conclusions: The data confirm the initiative’s success, highlighting strong community engagement and broad acceptance of the educational model. Integrating sport, values, and education proves to be an effective, scalable strategy for positively and collectively preventing childhood obesity.
Olympism; PODiaCar; Trofei di Milano Cortina; childhood obesity; children; sport
Settore MEDS-20/A - Pediatria generale e specialistica
9-lug-2025
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1244557
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