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Weekend
TV Watchers Grow Up Obese
People who watched more weekend TV as kids are more
likely to be obese as grownups, a new study from the UK
shows.
The findings add to a growing body of evidence linking
time spent in front of the tube to excess weight. Several
factors may be responsible, the researchers note in The
Journal of Pediatrics. TV watching replaces time that
could be spent being physically active, kids who watch
more TV see more ads for unhealthy foods, and kids may
munch junk food while watching.
In the current study, Dr. Russell M. Viner of Middlesex
Hospital in London and Dr. Tim J. Cole of University College
London set out to determine whether the timing and type
of TV watching, as well as mothers' attitudes toward television,
would have any effect on adult weight. They analyzed a
group of more than 11,200 British men and women born in
1970 who were followed up at ages 5, 10 and 30.
Every additional hour of weekend TV watched at age 5
increased the likelihood of obesity at age 30 by 7 percent,
the researchers found. There was no connection between
adult obesity and mothers' attitudes toward TV, weekday
TV watching, or the type of programing watched.
Viner and Cole point out that their study addressed TV
watching in 1975, when the UK had only three TV channels.
Only one carried advertising, which at the time "was relatively
unsophisticated and limited." This suggests, they conclude,
that the effect of TV watching seen in their study is
likely due to its displacement of physical activity, rather
than any effect of food advertising.
In another study published in the same journal, Dr. Kirsten
K. Davison of the State University of New York at Albany
and colleagues found that parents' own TV viewing habits
had a major effect on how much TV their children watched.
Their survey of 173 girls aged 9 to 11 found that 40
percent exceeded the American Academy of Pediatrics' recommended
limit of two hours a day. Girls whose parents watched
a lot of TV themselves, as well as those who relied heavily
on TV as a recreational activity and spent more time watching
TV as a family, were more likely to exceed the limit.
Not surprisingly, girls whose parents did not limit their
TV viewing tended to watch more.
In an editorial accompanying the study, Dr. Reginald
Washington of the University of Colorado School of Medicine
in Lone Tree points out that excessive parental TV viewing
may be setting children up for a lifetime of doing the
same. "They are, in a sense, learning that TV is not only
a normal part of life, but it is their chief form of recreation."
As Davison and her team write, "Children can learn to
choose and prefer activities other than TV viewing, playing
video games and using the computer. The challenge is to
provide guidance and support for parents that will promote
this objective." They cite one helpful resource, the TV
Turnoff Network (www.tvturnoff.org).