Home About Us Feedback Download
     Advanced Search  
June 19, 2013
 India
National
Politics
Business
Sports
Sci-Tech
Entertainment
Travel
Health
Religion
Art - Culture
Diaspora
Education
 International
Pakistan
Rest of South Asia
Asia
Americas
Europe
Australasia
Gulf-Middle East
Africa
World
  Home » National   E-mail this to a friend   Printable version
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TV habits can foretell kids' fitness
7/16/2012 1:09:00 PM

Toronto, July 16 (IANS) Each hour of TV that a two to four-year-old watches elevates the risk of a larger waistline and reduction of muscle fitness, says a study.

According to experts, children should not watch more than two hours of TV a day.

We already knew that there is an association between pre-school television exposure and the body fat of fourth grade children, but this is the first study to describe more precisely what that association represents, said Linda Pagani, who conducted the research with Caroline Fitzpatrick, both from the University of Montreal and its St-Justine Mother and Child University Hospital.

Parents were asked about their child's TV habits. Trained examiners took waist measurements and administered the standing long jump test to measure child muscular fitness, said Pagani.

We found, for example that each weekly hour of TV at 29 months of age corresponds to a decrease of about a third of a centimetre in the distance a child is able to jump, said Pagani, the International Journal of Behavioural Nutrition and Physical Activity reported.

The pursuit of sports by children depends in part on their perceived athletic competence, Fitzpatrick said.

Behavioural dispositions can become entrenched during childhood as it is a critical period for the development of habits and preferred activities.

Accordingly, the ability to perform well during childhood may promote participation in sporting activities in adulthood, Fitzpatrick said, according to a university statement.

Along with their parents, 1,314 children from the Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development database participated in this study.

When the children were 2.5 to 4.5 years of age, their parents reported how many hours of TV during the week and weekend they watched, said a university statement.

The average was 8.8 hours per week at the onset of the study, a figure that increased on average by 6 hours over the next two years to reach 14.8 hours per week by the age of 4.5 years.

Thus, 15 percent of the children participating in the study were already watching over 18 hours per week according to their parent's reports at that time.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    E-mail this to a friend   Printable version
Top News
  Team India would not focus on ind ...
  Women in Kolkata demand death pen ...
  Infiltration bid foiled in Poonch ...
  Tourism Minister announces new ca ...
  U'khand CM Bahuguna thanks PM, So ...
  Manmohan Singh announces 1,000 cr ...
  Congress celebrates Rahul Gandhi' ...
  War of words between J-K educatio ...
  Demonstrating teachers baton-char ...
  Uttarakhand floods: Rajnath Singh ...
 
World News
  Obama to propose further U.S., Ru ...
  Pentagon opening front-line comba ...
  Suicide bombers attack UN office ...
  Pregnant workers suffer routine d ...
  'Former terrorist' Bill Ayers say ...
  GOP Congressman wants to ban abor ...
  US House passes bill to ban abort ...
  Majority of Americans view GOP le ...
  Oz MP brands new bill favouring d ...
  What workers hate about work cult ...
 
Advertisement 
National|Politics|Business|Sports|Sci-Tech|Entertainment|Travel|Health|Religion|Art - Culture|Diaspora|Education|
Pakistan|Rest of South Asia|Asia|Americas|Europe|Australasia|Gulf-Middle East|Africa|World|
Help | Site Map | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Publishers

©2013 southasianews.com, All Rights Reserved
© 2013 Saavn LLC. All rights reserved.