Pose your questions on Ask, Answer, Learn to Dr. Greene and the DrGreene.com community.
What's going down your drain?
Set your TiVo to see Dr. Greene on the Dr. Oz Show. Tuesday, March 23rd. Check your local listing for show times in your area.
Dr. Greene will be chatting live for one hour on Thursday, March 25th at 10:00 a.m. PT (Noon CT) (1:00 p.m. ET). Click Here to chat with Dr. Greene
One finding from an August 2005 study of kids walking to school was predictable; another was rather surprising. In this study, published online August 17, 2005 in the British Medical Journal, four classes of 30 students each were recruited to wear devices that measured their amounts of healthy moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) throughout the day (except when showering, bathing, or swimming). As expected, those that walk to and from school had significantly more total physical activity than those that traveled by car or bus. In fact, 100% of the walkers met the recommended average of at least 60 minutes of MVPA each day.
Surprisingly, though, the walkers got more exercise even when the walk itself was not counted! In particular, those that walked to school tended also to get more exercise during the morning break, during the lunch break, throughout the school day, and outside of school. Even those who walked just one way each school day enjoyed significant benefits during every time period measured over those that rode in cars or buses.
The students in this study were all 13 or 14 years old. Previous research has produced similar results in 10-year-old children. In 5-year-olds, the benefits beyond the walk itself are not clear. Getting active seems to encourage getting active – perhaps all the more so as kids grow up.
Click here to hear the audio of this article.
The boys and I love to hang around in our 'jammas on the rare occasion that...
You might also be interested in the indepth report we have on site located...
Hi Dr. Greene,
From 5-7 yrs old I had multiple kidney infections and...
The sleep problems you are experiencing are very very typical for this age...