Advertisement
Holiday pet care
You're packed and ready to go. For two weeks into the blue yonder. What about your pets?
No default organ donation
Make everyone an organ donor unless they opt out? The Brits have decided not to.
     TERMS     GET A DAILY HEALTH TIP  
  
MAKE HEALTH24 YOUR HOMEPAGE   
H24 NEWS MEDICAL SCHEMES DIET FITNESS NATURAL MAN WOMAN SEX PREGNANCY CHILD TEEN SUN
FOCUS CENTRES MEDS ORAL PET MIND GRAPHICS VIDEOS ANTI-AGEING WIN TOOLS EXPERTS TALK FIND



Links
 Healthy home
 Find a buddy
 Fitness
 Diet & Food
 Psychology

Difficult issues
Backpacks get bad rap
While they may be crammed with everything but the kitchen sink, those heavy backpacks your children lug to school don't cause back pain.

That surprising finding comes from a new US University of Michigan Health System study.

 
Advertisement
For years, experts have warned that children need to lighten their backpack loads, wear the packs on both shoulders to evenly distribute the load, and put down that burden whenever possible.

Heavy backpacks don't inflict stress
But a study by researcher Dr Andrew Haig says those heavy backpacks don't actually inflict stress and strain on young backs. Haig is medical director of the university's Spine Programme and an associate professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation and surgery at the the university's medical school.

"There is no good scientific evidence to support the claim that schoolbag load is a contributing factor to the development of low back pain in growing children," Haig says in a news release.

Avtivity level, body weight to blame?
Instead, his study indicates a child's activity level and body weight may have more impact on whether they suffer back pain.

The study was presented May 21 at the World Congress of the International Society for Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine in Prague, Czech Republic.

For this study, students aged 7 to 15 were asked about their backpack use, back pain, activity levels and transportation to school. The children and their backpacks were weighed and the children's heights recorded. Those numbers were used to determine the backpack weight as a percentage of body weight.

Interesting findings
Nearly all the students said they used a backpack every day. Third grade students carried an average of 5,7 percent of their body weight in their packs, while older primary school students carried backpacks equal to 11,4 percent of their body weight.

Most children ignored warnings about putting both backpack straps over their shoulders and, instead, carried their packs over one shoulder.

More than a third of the children said they had at least one indicator of back pain. However, the study found those students didn't carry heavier backpacks than children with no indicators of back pain.

Older children experience more pain
The study also found there was no relationship between back pain and whether students wore their backpacks on one or both shoulders.

Older primary school children ("middle schoolers") were more likely than younger children (45 percent versus 15 percent) to report back pain. That could be the result of the children's declining activity levels and physical condition.

Other factors at play?
"The students' body mass index, an indicator of obesity, increased from the third graders to middle schoolers, so the middle schoolers were more fat. Also, the percent of students who walked or biked to school dropped dramatically in the older kids, so they're much less active. At the same time, they reported watching much more TV and spending more time playing video games," Haig says in the news release.

"Frankly, I think that might be more of a factor in back pain than the backpacks," he says.

He says exercise squeezes and stretches spinal discs, which act as shock absorbers for the back. This exercise-generated motion pumps in nutrients and oxygen, which help keep the discs healthy. Without that movement, spinal discs may lack nutrition and that may lead to back pain. - (HealthScout News)

Read more:
Backpacks a school danger
Click here for related titles on Kalahari.net

 
Print this article
 Rate this article
Poor 1 2 3 4 5 Excellent

Previous Next
 
Subscribe to...
*Daily tip
*Weekly tip
Want to subscribe to our newsletters?
Click here.
*Stand a chance to win R1000 every month!

 
 Other articles
10 signs of vision problems
Add seeing to reading and writing
Check your child's vision
Backpacks get bad rap
Beating backpack back pain
Wearing a school backpack
Buckling under backpacks
Kids and computer strain
Your diabetic child at school
When push comes to shove
Tik: is your child at risk?
Bullying on the playground
Standing up to bullies
Stress: help your child cope
Teen health danger zones
Educate children about sex
Sex education – why and how?
[fasfacts]
 Sponsored links
 Health24 links

Advertisement

 

© Health24 2000-2008. All rights reserved
  
We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health
information.
Verify here.