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Inactivity
Blamed for Teens' Weight Gains
Excerpt
By
Ira Dreyfuss,
AP
Over two decades, teenagers have been getting fatter because they
have been exercising less, not because they have been eating more,
a study says.
Researcher Lisa Sutherland of the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill analyzed federal data
on the diet, weight and physical activity of teens, ages 12 to
19. From 1980 to 2000, calories eaten rose 1 percent and obesity
rose 10 percent, while physical activity dropped 13 percent.
Those percentages show that teenagers
must have been getting fat primarily because they burned fewer
calories. "If caloric intake is flat and physical activity is
declining, there is a cause and effect relationship there," Sutherland
said.
She presented her findings last
month in San Diego at a scientific conference of the Federation
of American Societies for Experimental Biology. However, although
other experts accept the idea that teens have become less active,
the experts find it hard to swallow the conclusion that teens
have not been overeating as well.
Sutherland looked at three large
federal surveys. Data on weight came from the National Health
and Nutrition Examination Survey, and data on physical activity
was from the Youth Risk Behavior Survey, both maintained by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Data on caloric intake
was from the Nationwide Food Consumption Survey maintained by
the Agriculture Department.
The study said that teenagers ate
an average of 2,290 calories a day over the 20 years. It also
said that while 42 percent of teens reported doing at least 30
minutes of physical activity on a typical day at the start of
the study, only 29 percent did at the end.
The study was funded by an unrestricted
grant from the National Soft Drink Association. But Sutherland
said that in keeping with university rules, the association had
no control over any aspect of the research.
"I was trained as a nutritionist,"
Sutherland said. "The data kept coming out that caloric intake
was basically flat, but there was a huge drive to look at diet.
I said, 'Let's look at physical activity.'"
It's not surprising that teens
have become less physically active, Sutherland said. Today's kids
have more and better computers and video games, and less school
physical education or after-school play, she said.
"I remember wanting to go outside
the minute the sun came up, and my parents dragging me to go inside
at sunset," said Sutherland, who is 35.
She noted that her study was limited
because the three surveys had differing methodologies, and the
decline in physical activity was based on students' self-reports.
While they accept Sutherland's
idea that teenagers are burning too few calories, some outside
observers think the report underestimates the damage also done
by bad diet.
"I would take exception to that
1 percent (increase in calories)," said Dr. Reginald Washington,
of Denver, who chairs the sports medicine and fitness committee
of the American Academy of Pediatrics. "I think it's much higher
than that."
Fast food calories are a big part
of teens' eating patterns, and supersizing is making the portions
grow, Washington said.
"We are pretty sure they are eating
too much, no matter what the data say," said Dr. Nancy Krebs of
the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center in Denver, who
chairs the pediatricians' group's committee on nutrition. "There
is quite a consensus that it is due to a combination of factors."
"Our view is that it is a complex
issue," said clinical nutritionist JoAnn Hattner of Stanford University,
a spokeswoman for the American Dietetic Association. "It may well
be their activity is down, and for some it may be a combination
of increased caloric intake and decreased activity."
Accepting the conclusion that food
is not a big part of the problem could take pressure off food
companies to cut the calories they feed the nation, Hattner said.
"There is enough clamor throughout
the country that we are getting corporations to change," Hattner
said. "We need to continue that clamor."
___
On the Net:
Youth Risk Behavior Survey: http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dash/yrbs/2001/youth01online.htm
National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nhanes.htm
Nationwide Food Consumption Survey:
http://www.barc.usda.gov/bhnrc/foodsurvey/home.htm
Reference
Source 102
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