Fitwize
Mission

Our Fitwize Mission is to be a force for good by empowering the youth of today and tomorrow, teaching them the life-long benefits of staying fit, eating right and living a healthy lifestyle.

Fitwize
Vision

To provide the world with a safe, organized and clean youth fitness facility, where kids can have fun while getting fit!

The Fitwize 4 Kids Fitness and Nutrition program is medically recognized as an effective health program for kids and is supported by a staff Medical Advisor and Director of Nutrition. Research over the past 10 to 15 years has shown that with proper adult supervision, strength training is a safe and effective method of conditioning for children.

Fitwize 4 Kids Lifestyle Centers provide specially designed fitness equipment that is made for kids bodies. Each piece allows for multi-joint, closed kinetic chain movements. Research shows that these types of movements reduce the likelihood of damage to developing bone growth platelets. The movements also maximize compression forces that increase bone density in adolescents and pre-adolescents. The features in the Fitwize 4 Kids resistance training program, allow growing kids to safely build lean muscle mass and reduce the risk of injury.

Fitwize
Self Esteem

  • 15% of America’s youth is overweight.
  • Obesity and super-obesity are up 36% and 98%, respectively, in the past 20 years.
  • The average child gets less than 15 minutes of vigorous activity a day.25% of U.S. children spend 4 or more hours per week watching TV.
  • Poor diet and physical inactivity can lead to children developing adult diseases.
  • 90% percent of parents think their children are fit, when only one out of three.
  • 35% of parents rated their children’s school programs for teaching good patterns of eating and physical activity to prevent obesity as “poor.” “non-existent.” or “don’t know.”

A Worldwide Solution
is Apparent

The growing trend of childhood obesity and inactivity is not isolated to the United States; other countries are rapidly catching up. More than 20% of European youngsters between the ages of 5 and 17 are either overweight or obese. Asia lags behind the U.S. and Europe in its obesity statistics, but Thailand, Malaysia, Japan and the Philippines have all reported. troubling increases in childhood obesity in recent years. In China Up to 10% of China's™ 290 million children are believed to be overweight or obese, and that percentage is expected to double a decade from now.