Every Kid Healthy Week
Encourage youth to get up and get outside!
The facts:
- One in three kids in the U.S. is overweight or obese.
- One in two U.S. students does not receive physical education in an average week
- Severely obese children miss school 4 times as often as children of a healthy weight.
- Schools lack the resources and support necessary to implement changes that can positively impact not only health outcomes for students but also their readiness to learn and succeed in school and beyond.
- The U.S. spends $119 billion annually on obesity-related health care costs.
Here are a few ways to take action and to make the connection between your work and Every Kid Healthy Week:
- Celebrate Every Kid Healthy Week with a special event – or join an event that is already happening in your community.
- Check out the Every Kid Health Week events calendar and interactive map for more information.
- Volunteer at a local school
- Check out CDC’s Healthy Schools resources page for tools, state programs, data and graphics/multimedia

Together we can help all 130,000+ U.S. schools provide healthy foods, quality health and physical education, and comprehensive physical activity for all 55 million students by 2030.
From our Journals
Health Education & Behavior
- Examining Daily Associations of Nature Exposure, Body Appreciation, and Physical Activity Among Adolescents
- Swap Up: Four Years of Behavior Change Through Adolescent Nutrition Education in Oklahoma
- The Association Between Adolescents’ Food Literacy, Vegetable and Fruit Consumption, and Other Eating Behaviors
Health Promotion Practice
- Adapting Adolescent Dating Violence Prevention Interventions to Victims of Child Sexual Abuse
- Application of Youth-Led Participatory Action Research to Examining Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights in Ontario: What Can We Learn?
- Promoting Physical Activity and Peer Relationships in Adolescent Girls Through a Summer Program
- The Role of the Public Health Workforce in Securing Political Commitment for Tackling Childhood Obesity in Local Government
- Patterns in Civic Engagement and Health Among Diverse Adolescent Students