Study: Less TV Doesn’t Boost Exercise for Kids
Turning off the television doesn’t necessarily mean that children are more inclined to be physically active. A 2007 study, conducted by medical researchers in Massachusetts and published in the journal Pediatrics, was aimed at examining the associations between television viewing and physical activity in adolescence. The four-year study of more than 10,000 U.S. children found no relationship between TV watching and leisure-time exercise.
This is useful information as parents are becoming more aware of the serious health crisis facing overweight American youth. It is not enough just to turn off the TV or limit other sedentary activity with the assumption that exercise will prevail. Planning for (and following through with) regular physical activity like family bike riding, walking, or hiking is an important component of a healthy lifestyle, for everyone. ________________________________________________________________
Good Health Information provided by: Loren Rees, D.C., N.M.T. Dr. Rees is a Doctor of Chiropractic and certified Neuromuscular Therapist in Hingham, Massachusetts. He has over 13 years experience in complimentary alternative healthcare treating all manner of neuro-musculoskeletal pain and dysfunction. He is a member of the American Chiropractic Association and the Massachusetts Chiropractic Society. Please contact him directly through his website: www.reeschiropractic.com.
Rees Chiropactic ph: 781-741-5300 185 Lincoln St. #110, Hingham, MA 02043 fx: 781-741-5310
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