SCIENCE
NEWS
ScienceDaily (Nov.
6, 2009) — School-based
physical education plays a key role in curbing obesity
and improving fitness among adolescents from low-income
communities, according to a new study led by researchers
at the University of California, San Francisco and UC Berkeley.
The study, which identifies opportunities
for adolescents to improve their health based on routine
daily activities, finds that regular participation in PE
class is significantly associated with greater cardiovascular
fitness and lower body mass index.
"We took an incredibly comprehensive look at all of
the opportunities kids have throughout their day to engage
in physical activity and determined which are the most strongly
linked to fitness and weight status," said first author
Kristine Madsen, MD, MPH, an assistant professor of pediatrics
at UCSF Children's Hospital. "Obesity continues to
be a major public health concern, particularly in low-income
communities, so it is imperative that we develop targeted
interventions to improve the health of at-risk youth."
"This research will help support moving physical education
policy forward. Clearly, physical education in schools is
an underutilized tool in our efforts to reduce pediatric
obesity," said Patricia Crawford, DrPH, RD, the study's
senior author and director of the Dr. Robert C. and Veronica
Atkins Center for Weight and Health at UC Berkeley.
The study appears in the November 2009 issue of the journal
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine.
Madsen and her co-investigators surveyed 9,268 seventh-
and ninth-grade students at 19 racially and ethnically
diverse public schools in low-income communities throughout
California. The schools represented in the survey also
were participants in The California Endowment's Healthy
Eating Active Communities Initiative, a statewide program
that aims to fight childhood obesity and to develop policy
changes that will reduce risk factors for diabetes and
obesity.
Students answered questions anonymously about their level
of participation in several daily physical activities,
including PE class, walking to and from school and playing
on sports teams. They also rated how much they enjoyed
PE and estimated the amount of time they spent exercising
during PE class. An additional survey question addressed
whether students regularly purchased food from snack carts,
fast food restaurants or stores on their way to and from
school.
Answers obtained through the survey were then linked to
each school's results from the state-mandated Fitnessgram
-- an annual assessment of students' fitness levels --
to determine which physical activities had a significant
impact on weight and cardiovascular health. Weight was
measured using body mass index scores, and cardiovascular
fitness was assessed using the amount of time it takes
to walk/run a mile.
The researchers found that engaging in at least 20 minutes
of exercise during PE class was significantly associated
with both shorter mile times and lower body mass index
scores. Furthermore, as the students' reported levels of
enjoyment of PE increased, their mile times decreased.
"PE was by far the most significant predictor of students'
fitness and was the only variable associated with improved
weight status," Madsen said. "I think this shows
that we need to increase the importance of physical education
in schools and set up tougher standards in the same way
we set up tough standards around academic performance."
The data also showed a significant
association between walking to school and shorter mile
times; however, walking to school also was significantly
associated with higher body mass index. The researchers
state that this finding was not surprising, due to the
fact that those students who walked to school were also
more likely to buy food while in transit.
"The most affordable food options in low-income neighborhoods
tend to be unhealthy, so it is not surprising that students
who purchase more food on their way to and from school are
more likely to be overweight," Madsen said. "We
absolutely need to work with local vendors in these communities
to improve the food environment and create healthy zones
in the vicinity of schools."
According to Madsen, additional
research should aim to identify the specific factors that
contribute to students' enjoyment of PE, so that curricula
can be shaped to improve the quality of classes and to
achieve higher levels of physical exertion.
Additional co-authors include Wendi Gosliner, MPH, RD,
and Gail Woodward-Lopez, MPH, RD, both of UC Berkeley's
Center for Weight and Health.
The research was supported by The California Endowment
and Kaiser Permanente and through grants from the National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the
American Heart Association.
University of California - San Francisco (2009, November
6). Physical Education Key To Improving Health In Low-income
Adolescents. ScienceDaily. Retrieved December 10, 2009,
from http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/11/091105132456.htm |