Be a Good Role Model: Building a Healthy Lifestyle With Your Kids

You want your kids to grow up healthy and strong. After all, children who learn to make good health decisions today are more likely to make them for years to come. But how do you do it? A healthy lifestyle starts with you.

Set good examples when your kids are young, and healthy habits will be the norm. Following in your footsteps, children will be more likely to continue to make good choices and live a healthy lifestyle. 

1. Healthy Eating Smart and Simple

Children and adults alike require the right food to flourish. Set the table for a healthy lifestyle by eating meals at home featuring:

  • Fruits and vegetables
  • Lean protein from meat, poultry, fish or beans
  • Low- or no-fat milk and other dairy products
  • Whole-grain foods
  • Water 

Encourage your children to eat fruit and vegetables at each meal and as snacks. Pop your own popcorn on the stove or prepare carrot sticks or apple slices as delicious, healthy grab-and-go snacks. Leave the processed snacks with added sugar and empty calories at the store.

When meal planning, avoid prepackaged foods, and let your children pick a new food to try each week. Scale portion sizes for young and old but keep the menu the same for all members of the family. Encourage everyone to stop eating when they’re full and don’t force anyone to clean their plates. Establishing healthy eating habits early can set them up for a lifetime of good health.

2. Get Moving for a Healthy Lifestyle 

Many kids just want to go outside and play, and it’s important that you let them and join them when you can. Children and adults need physical activity every day.

If you don’t have a front or back yard, it’s time to head to a park. Bring some toys that your kids can only use at the park to help build the excitement to go play outside. By making exercise enjoyable, your child is more likely to want to engage in it.

A few fun ways your children can have fun while staying active include:

  • Dancing
  • Jumping rope
  • Playing baseball, basketball, soccer or another favorite sport
  • Playing tag or hide-and-go-seek
  • Riding bikes 
  • Running races 
  • Swimming

3. Getting Regular Check-ups

Just as children regularly go to the pediatrician, it is very important for parents to go to a primary care provider (PCP) at least once a year for a routine physical as well as to get any recommended shots, like the flu vaccine. This preventive care goes a long way because it keeps you healthy. Additionally, having an established PCP, which may be a doctor, nurse practitioner or physician associate, is very important. Your PCP gets to know you and can often detect health problems before they occur or can discover them sooner, so you can stay well as long as possible. They can also treat chronic conditions or refer you to a specialist if needed.

4. Putting Screens in Their Place

The American Academy of Pediatrics states that there are no universal guidelines about how much screen time a child should have. Rather than worry about the amount of time a child spends playing video games or watching content, focus instead on ensuring what they watch is educational or age-appropriate for them.

As your child gets old enough to start using tablets and televisions independently, never rely on devices to babysit your kids. Make rules about keeping tablets out of your kid’s bedroom and don’t put a television in there either. This goes for parents, too. Leave the laptop and the television in the den.

Even by following these tips, your kids may be getting a bit too much screen time if you’re not careful. Signs that your child is getting too much screen time include:

  • Difficulty sleeping
  • Loss of interest in screen-free activities, including being with family and friends
  • Negative self-image, bad attitude and fear of missing out (FOMO)
  • Lack of physical activity 
  • Poor academic performance
  • Weight gain

For you and the kiddos, limit screen time, especially in the evening and night hours, as the brightness from screens can disrupt your natural sleep schedule.

5. Set a Healthy Sleep Schedule

Lack of sleep does more than make children irritable. It limits children’s attention span, makes them more likely to make poor decisions and zaps their energy. Not getting enough sleep can even increase your children’s risk for health problems later in life, such as high blood pressure, obesity and mental health disorders.

Ensure your children get good sleep with these helpful guidelines:

  • Create a sleep-friendly environment. Turn the lights low in your children’s bedroom and remove toys from their beds. Keep the room cool and comfortable to help kids fall and stay asleep.
  • Develop a bedtime routine. Before bedtime, have your children brush their teeth and put on pajamas. Then spend time reading a book together to wind down and prepare kids to sleep.
  • Let your teens sleep in. Teenagers go through a lot of changes, mentally and physically, that benefit from getting the 8–10 hours of sleep they need each night. If your teen’s overloaded schedule prevents good sleep, consider cutting out excessive obligations.
  • Stick to a schedule. Have your children wake up, eat, nap and play at the same times each day, even on the weekends. This established routine will help your children’s internal clocks stay on track.
  • Turn off the screens. An hour before bedtime, turn off all screens, and always keep bedrooms screen-free.

6. Talk to Your Kids About Substances

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, most adult smokers started smoking when they were younger. Smoking traditional or electronic cigarettes, vaping, chewing tobacco and alcohol use can lead to heart disease, cancer and more. 

By keeping an eye on what content your kids consume on streaming services and television, you can try to control the messages they see about smoking and drinking. Young children will struggle to tell the difference between cartoons made for children and cartoons made for adults. Watching with children and talking about it can help.

Beyond monitoring, you should always be ready to have a discussion with them about making healthy choices. By talking to your children regularly, you help guide them to lead a healthy lifestyle and avoid bad habits that bring bad consequences.

Starting as early as possible, explain to your children how a healthy lifestyle can energize and strengthen their body and mind. Use real-life examples to show the benefits of good choices and the dangers of poor decisions. 

More to Read

From a healthy diet to exercise and beyond, raising healthy children takes a team.

University of Maryland Medical System pediatric experts are pleased to be part of your team.

Medically reviewed by Esther Kim Liu, MD, FAAP.

The University of Maryland Medical System is the Official Medical Team of the Terps.

Posted by Eric Jackson