The Caribbean, long celebrated globally for its postcard-perfect coastlines and warm, inviting tropical climate, is grappling with a rapidly growing public health crisis that threatens the long-term well-being of its youngest populations. Data collected by the Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA) in 2025 paints a stark picture: more than 50% of Caribbean adults and 33% of children currently live with overweight or obesity, with the condition affecting every age demographic across the region. If left unaddressed, this widespread public health issue puts the region’s future generations at elevated risk of lifelong chronic illness.
Under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, every child holds an inherent right to access the highest attainable standard of health, as well as age-appropriate opportunities for play and recreation. Yet in the Caribbean, these fundamental rights are regularly sidelined by overlapping pressures: intensifying academic demands on young students, rapid urbanization that reshapes daily routines, and the growing influence of global commercial food and beverage marketing. To reverse this damaging trend, public health advocates argue that a rethinking of primary and secondary education systems—especially the role of structured physical education (PE)—is critical to laying the foundation for lifelong healthy habits.
UNESCO’s International Charter of Physical Education, Physical Activity and Sport has long recognized that upholding children’s right to activity is a cornerstone of both quality education and lifelong population health. To implement effective reform, advocates emphasize the need to draw a clear distinction between traditional athletic coaching and formal school-based PE. While coaching focuses on preparing individual athletes or teams for competitive performance, PE is a universal, curriculum-based subject designed to build core movement skills, social competence, self-confidence, and sustained healthy habits for *all* students, regardless of athletic ability. Public health leaders argue that PE deserves status as a core academic subject, and Caribbean governments should leverage UNESCO’s global guidelines to update outdated national curricula. This distinction is key to unpacking the systemic, interconnected public health challenges facing Caribbean youth today.
Caribbean public health authorities outline three overlapping systemic drivers of the region’s childhood health crisis:
– **Chronic physical inactivity**: Fewer than one in three Caribbean teenagers meet the World Health Organization’s recommended 60 minutes of daily moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, creating an immediate public health risk that requires urgent intervention.
– **Unhealthy dietary shifts**: The rapid proliferation of ultra-processed food products, sugar-sweetened beverages, and meals high in unhealthy saturated fats across local food systems has drastically accelerated the development of obesity and related chronic conditions, demanding prompt policy action.
– **Lack of accessible public recreation infrastructure**: Most urban centers across the region lack safe, free-to-access public play spaces for children, limiting opportunities for unstructured activity and compounding existing health risks for low-income and marginalized communities.
Across Caribbean school systems, institutional priorities have pushed PE to the margins, with academic subjects treated as inherently more valuable than physical development. This culture frames play and activity as secondary to test scores and college preparation, creating a systemic imbalance that threatens the holistic development of children. Advocates warn that both extreme academic pressure and passive, unstructured leisure time centered on screen use harm healthy childhood growth.
Decades of global public health research confirm that regular physical activity delivers wide-ranging benefits beyond physical health: it boosts cognitive function, improves mental health and mood, strengthens social skills, builds self-esteem, and increases resilience to stress. For this reason, PE and daily activity are irreplaceable components of a complete education, and a critical tool to prevent an entire generation from developing preventable chronic health conditions later in life.
To address the crisis, public health leaders from Healthy Caribbean Youth have outlined a five-point actionable policy framework tailored to the Caribbean context:
1. **Make PE a mandatory core subject in all schools**: Governments must invest in ongoing training for qualified PE teachers, fund updated equipment and safe facilities, set a legal requirement for a minimum number of weekly PE hours, and regularly monitor participation and health outcomes. Successful reform also requires buy-in from school leaders, parents, and local community partners to sustain long-term change.
2. **Break down inter-ministerial silos**: Ministries of health, education, and urban planning must coordinate proactively to integrate play and healthy habit formation into every child’s daily routine, rather than treating these goals as the sole responsibility of a single government department.
3. **Invest in community-centered safe play spaces**: Governments must prioritize the urgent development of free, accessible recreational infrastructure in all communities, with targeted investment in low-income urban neighborhoods that currently lack these resources. This can be achieved through reallocating public budget resources, pursuing global public health grants, and building cross-sector partnerships with local businesses and non-governmental organizations. Local community groups can also play a key role in long-term maintenance of these spaces.
4. **Restrict unhealthy food access in schools**: Governments must implement a full ban on the sale and marketing of ultra-processed food products in all school facilities, require schools to implement daily structured movement programs, and conduct regular compliance inspections with clear penalties for schools that fail to meet standards. Education authorities must provide immediate administrative support to help schools implement these new rules smoothly.
5. **Normalize daily activity beyond competitive sports**: The movement advocates for expanding access to all forms of play and physical activity for every child, not just elite athletes, to protect long-term population well-being.
The urgency of this crisis cannot be overstated: continued delays and policy inaction will lead to irreversible public health outcomes that will impact every sector of Caribbean society, from healthcare costs to economic productivity, far beyond physical health alone.
Now is the time for collective action from communities, policymakers, educators, and families across the region. Advocates are calling for concrete, binding programs and policies that prioritize children’s health, play, and holistic development above competing political and institutional priorities. Two core measurable targets have been put forward to hold leaders accountable: cutting childhood obesity rates by 10% over the next decade, and guaranteeing that every primary and secondary school in the region provides a minimum of 120 minutes of structured physical activity per week for all students. Public tracking of these clear benchmarks and transparent sharing of progress will help build momentum for collective regional change. Every member of the public can raise their voice to demand that leaders, educators, and caregivers act without delay. The future of Caribbean children depends on immediate, decisive action—this is the moment to champion every child’s fundamental right to play and thrive.
This commentary was written by Offniel Lamont, a Sports Medicine Physiotherapist and Public Health Youth Advocate affiliated with Healthy Caribbean Youth (HCY), Jamaica Health Advocates – Youth Arm (JHAYA), and Fix My Food Jamaica (a UNICEF Jamaica initiative). The article includes a standard disclaimer noting that the author’s views and claims are his own and do not represent the official positions of Duravision Inc., Dominica News Online, or any of their subsidiary brands.
