Increase Gym Time to
Combat Obesity in Girls
A new report suggests a simple strategy
for combating obesity among young girls -- increasing their gym
time.
Giving first graders just one more
hour per week of physical education than they had in kindergarten
may effectively reduce obesity rates among girls who are overweight
or at risk for becoming overweight, the report indicates.
"Our findings are important because
they suggest one important public health strategy for combating
obesity in the early years," study co-author Dr. Ashlesha Datar,
of the RAND Corporation, a nonprofit research organization stated.
"In fact, school-based physical education programs have the ability
to serve a large population of children at risk for obesity."
The US Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention recommends that children participate in daily physical
education classes, but research has shown that only a small minority
of children do so. In many cases, less than half of the class
time involves physical activity.
Various programs have been developed
to improve physical education classes, however, and studies have
shown that fitness in general among school-age youth can be improved
and obesity may be reduced through targeted programs.
Rather than suggest another intervention
or develop a new program, however, Datar and her co-author Dr.
Roland Sturm, evaluated whether the physical education classes
that are already in place in schools across the US may be used
to prevent childhood obesity.
"Existing PE programs in schools
have come under a lot of criticism because of their substandard
quality," Datar said. "In times of tight budgets, such programs
may in fact be at risk for cuts in funding."
"However, our study shows that
there may be benefits to overweight girls from increased PE instruction
in school," she said. "Therefore, schools and educators should
give PE programs another chance."
Datar and Sturm followed 9,751
US kindergarten students for two years. On average, they found
that kindergarten children spent less than one hour -- 57 minutes
-- in physical education classes each week.
Gym time increased, however, between
kindergarten and first grade. Sixteen percent of first graders
received physical education instruction three to four times per
week, compared with 12 percent of kindergarten children. More
than one third of first graders spent 31 to 60 minutes a day in
physical education classes, compared with about one fourth of
kindergartners.
As physical education class time
increased, body mass index (BMI) -- a measure of weight in relation
to one's height -- decreased among girls who were overweight or
at risk for becoming overweight, the report indicates.
Increasing physical education instruction
by just five hours per week between kindergarten and first grade
would reduce the prevalence of overweight in girls by 43 percent,
Datar and Sturm report in the September issue of the American
Journal of Public Health.
Increased physical education class
time did not seem to lead to similar BMI reductions among overweight
boys or normal weight children.
One goal of the program "Healthy
People 2010" is that children receive daily PE, Datar added. "Therefore
schools need to mobilize the necessary resources to provide high
quality physical education instruction to all children."
"High quality physical education
programs in schools are important because they not only help to
check overweight in the present, but also inculcate health promoting
habits in the early years that will reap benefits in the later
years," she said.
SOURCE: American Journal of Public
Health, September 2004.
Reference
Source 89
September 2, 2004
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