7/16/2008

As teenage years start, exercise tends to stop
By LINDSEY TANNER
The Associated Press


CHICAGO — One of the largest studies of its kind shows just how sluggish American children become once they hit the teen years: While 90 percent of 9-year-olds get a couple of hours of exercise most days, less than 3 percent of 15-year-olds do.
What’s more, the study suggests that less than a third of teens that age get even the minimum recommended by the government — an hour of moderate to vigorous exercise, like cycling, brisk walking, swimming or jogging.
The sharp drop raises concerns about inactivity continuing into adulthood, which could endanger kids’ health throughout their lives, the study’s authors said.
"People don’t recognize this as the crisis that it is," said the lead author, Dr. Philip Nader, a pediatrician and professor emeritus at the University of California at San Diego.
Inactivity is linked with greater risks for many health problems, including heart disease, obesity, high blood pressure and diabetes.
The new findings come a week after an influential pediatricians group recommended that more children have their cholesterol checked and that some as young as 8 be given cholesterol-lowering drugs. That advice was partly out of concern over future levels of heart disease and other ailments linked to rising rates of childhood obesity.
The latest study, appearing in today’s Journal of the American Medical Association, tracked about 1,000 U.S. children at various ages, from 2000 until 2006.
Special gadgets were used to record their activity. Average levels of moderate to vigorous activity fell from three hours a day at age 9 to less than an hour at age 15.
Nader said he was "surprised by how dramatic the decline was." He said possible reasons include that schools drop recess and gym classes and that kids increasingly use video games and computers.
The National Institute of Child Health and Human Development funded the research, calling it one of the most comprehensive studies of its kind.
James Griffin, science officer for the study, said that as children mature, "You would expect somewhat of a decline [in activity], but nothing of this magnitude."
He noted that the study coincided with the rise in popularity of video games, DVDs and Internet use — "all of the types of things that take children from outside and put them on a couch or in front of a computer."
Griffin said the results send a message to parents to teach their kids to balance computer time with more active pursuits, like walking the dog or shooting hoops.
Study participants were children involved in agency research on youth development, recruited from 10 hospitals around the country. Family income, race and ethnic background closely matched the U.S. population.
The researchers tracked the children’s activity levels starting at age 9, using an accelerometer — a device that attached to a belt and recorded movement. Activity levels were counted at ages 9, 11, 12 and 15 during the school week and on weekends.
That method isn’t foolproof because the device isn’t worn during swimming and contact sports. But the researchers said it’s unlikely that such activity happened often enough among the children studied to skew the results.
Through age 12, well over half the children got at least the government-recommended amount of activity every day. By age 15, less than one-third were that active on weekdays, and only about 17 percent were on weekends.
Boys were more active than girls at every age. But by age 15, even boys’ average activity levels fell short of recommendations, particularly on weekends.

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