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    Walk-to-School Programs Put Kids' Fitness First

    FRIDAY, Aug. 26 (HealthDay News) -- Saying "no" to the school bus and walking kids to school instead could be a step -- or more -- toward boosting children's activity levels, a new study shows.

    Texas researchers split a group of 149 fourth-graders from eight schools in Houston into active commuters -- those who walked to and from school up to five days a week -- and a control group who were driven by bus or car. At the beginning of the study, both groups had logged similar amounts of moderate to vigorous activity, about 46 to 49 minutes per day.

    But over the next five weeks, the kids who walked to school upped their activity slightly -- an average of 7 extra minutes per day of moderate to vigorous exercise. In contrast, those who got driven to school actually lowered their daily activity over the study period, to an average of 41 minutes daily.

    While the activity increase for walkers may seem modest, study author Dr. Jason Mendoza said that even small amounts of exercise are meaningful in a country with a 17 percent obesity rate for kids under age 19. About a third of adult Americans are obese, and another third are classified as overweight.

    "It's not like they're going to the gym to work out," said Mendoza, an assistant professor of pediatrics at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. "It's something they can build into their days without a lot of extra effort or equipment."

    The study is published in the September issue of the journal Pediatrics.

    Because of a "car-centric" society that favors wider roads and fewer sidewalks -- as well as a heightened fear of abductions by strangers -- far fewer kids walk to school than was the case four decades ago. According to study authors, 42 percent of children actively commuted (walked or biked) to school in 1969-70, compared to only 13 percent in 2009.

    Because of the brevity of the study period, Mendoza's team did not compare differences in the children's body mass indexes (BMIs) over that time, so it's impossible to say that the intervention caused the kids to lose (or at least not gain) excess weight. But all participants came from low-income districts with high numbers of ethnic minorities, groups that tend to have higher levels of childhood obesity.

    Study staff members took the helm of "walking school bus" groups of up to a dozen kids or more, Mendoza said, some of whom were also accompanied by parents who wanted to participate in the effort.

    Programs like this are supported by the Safe Routes to School National Partnership, a national organization that advocates for safe walking and bicycling to and from schools.

    However, walking school bus programs are still not exceptionally common, said Dr. Silva Arslanian, chief of the weight management and wellness center at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh.

    "The results aren't surprising," she said. "The real question is what happens once you stop the activity. The important thing is to sustain a behavior, and that's always been the difficulty in obesity prevention or treatments programs."

    Arslanian wasn't impressed by the fact that only 26 percent of the families who were approached for the walking school bus study decided to participate.

    "A 75 percent refusal for any study is extremely high. So, are people averse to the idea of walking?" she said. "Parents are not interested because they themselves are heavy, or have other burdens. It all boils down to role modeling and expectations in your child."

    Of course, walking to school versus being driven does require a bit more time -- the study showed a 38 percent jump in relative commuting time between the two groups. But Mendoza believes that parents can make "walking school bus" programs feasible by approaching them as a community endeavor.

    "Usually walking school buses split up days, like carpools, so it should save parents time if they get other parents to help," he explained. "There are parents who've decided to leave the car at home and take turns walking the kids to school. It might take a little longer to do it, but they build it into their day. It's good for them and good for the kids."

    Another advantage of the program is decreased traffic congestion around schools, where carpool lines can pose dangerous circumstances for kids getting into or out of cars, Mendoza noted.

    "I'm hoping policy makers and public health officials consider supporting these programs," he said. "It's a broad-based way to get our children to be more physically active. We could say it's an old-fashioned idea, but what's old is new again. We're adapting it to the reality of today."

    The Safe Routes to School National Partnership has more information about walk-to-school programs at www.saferoutespartnership.org/about.

    More information

    Find out more about walk-to-school programs at the Safe Routes to School National Partnership.

     

    24 comments

    • No  •  9 mths ago
      We walk to school in the mornings, but in the afternoon it is too hot out and I pick up my kids with the car. I am looking forward to when it is cooler out (aka, low 90's) in the afternoon so that I don't have to sit in that stupid after-school carpool lane.
    • Amy  •  9 mths ago
      Yoiu know, some parents find it easier to send their kids on the bus because we as a society do not keep the pedophiles locked up like the animals they are. When I was a kid, the only children who got to ride a bus to school were the handicapped children. I believe the state mandated the transportation of handicapped students, but everyone else was left to their own devices. In my grade school years, I walked. As a high school student, the school was at least an hour's walk on foot, so I caught the city's public transportation, which was for everyone, not just the kids.
    • Kat  •  9 mths ago
      This is not something that was possible where I grew up. School was 20 miles away. I can see benefits in urban areas but certainly not in rural areas.
    • Bookmouse  •  9 mths ago
      I just celebrated my 56th birthday last week, and I love walking! I'm down to 145, low blood pressure in a family with a history it, low body fat, and just a feel good attitude about myself. Perhaps it's time we tell the young'uns about the benefits of standing on your feet for a change.
      • Glo 9 mths ago
        I do not like my children walking to/from school because of the dangers they would be exposed to. There are gangs at middle school, and a few sexual offenders live in my neighborhood.
    • kristin  •  9 mths ago
      My child lives 4 miles from school, with the only access to/from said school via heavily-trafficked roads with no sidewalks. Perhaps I can get the people who funded this study to provide funding for a school to be built in our neighborhood. I promise I will make my child walk then...
    • truth 88  •  9 mths ago
      this is good
    • Harry  •  9 mths ago
      AK. Unfortunately, unless you had a study, it would never get past the school board. Scientists did do a very controlled study on the health conditions of the Pima people in Arizona and to compare them with the Mountain Pima in Sonora, Mexico. The Arizona Pima suffer from obesity and very high diabetes 2 conditions. The Pima in Sonora have no obesity and no diabetes. What they found was the difference in diet and exercise. The Arizona Pima kids rode buses to and from school and ate mostly fast food. The Sonora Pima kids ran to and from school at least 1 - 2 miles each way and their diet was chilies, beans and corn tortillas. There is a movement by the Arizona Pimas to try to adapt their Sonora cousins diet and lifestyle as much as possible to their lives.
    • mark  •  9 mths ago
      I hope tax payers didn't pay for that study.
    • wr  •  9 mths ago
      Mendoza probably received a heafty grant from the Federal Department of Education for this lame study. I wonder if he walked or drove to the bank.
    • constructive  •  9 mths ago
      Please do not make this sound like a breakthrough idea. We want to fix our society, how about returning to the morals and family ideas of yesteryear.
      • A Yahoo! User 9 mths ago
        Well said.
    • TKramar  •  9 mths ago
      I don't drive today, it takes about half an hour to walk to and from work every day. Or to a grocery store. If it rains, I can take a bus, takes five or ten minutes to the stop, five minutes on the bus, and about two from there to work.
    • Tom  •  9 mths ago
      duh????I get mad when the #$%$ school bus does door to door service.I think they can manage to walk an extra couple hundred feet.No wonder our kids are so f ing fat........Between stuff like that and video games, no gym, cause not being able to climb the ropes might hurt fat Johnny's little feelings...... ARGHHHHH!!!!!!!! I fear for our future kids.They are going to grow up to be chubby little wimps.Just another small part of America's demise.
    • Glo  •  9 mths ago
      No one in Texas wants to walk home when it's 107 degrees outside.
      • Amy L 9 mths ago
        AND Texas has one of the highest rates of obesity. Do you think there's any connection? Oh, and is it always 107 degrees in Texas?
      • CCC 9 mths ago
        The heat does need to be a consideration. Carrying a heavy backpack and doing a good walk can cause heat stroke. 95% of the days of the year would be just fine for walking anywhere. I walked to high school near Houston and I dont remember the heat being an issue- maybe cause I was too excited to be getting home!
      • No 9 mths ago
        We walk to school in the morning, but use a car in the afternoon when it is hot.
    • galen swalen  •  9 mths ago
      i went to country school , a mile each way , up hill twice , downhill twice , in thunderstorms , blizzards , wading snow drifts 4 feet deep , then cutting across country to herd the milk cows to the barn , take off my school clothes , go milk two cows , feed 200 chickens and thirty pigs , and put 8 bales of hay out for the stock cows , then pump water at the well and carry pails to the house for drinking and then we were ready for that fried chicken , mashed potatoes, and green beans from the cellar , with coconut cream pie from scratch i cant begin to say what summers were like , folks thats what they call the good ole days , sure wish i could do it again , so walk your kids to school you only get one chance case closed
      • wr 9 mths ago
        I might believe you IF you said your grandmother, but she probably died at age 40.
      • Kevin Altieri 9 mths ago
        If I believed you I would be an idiot, BUT I'm not. It's idiots like you who think they know everything and it's there business to tell everyone how to live.
    • MARTY D  •  9 mths ago
      With all the pedophiles roaming about we don't need make our kids walk to school. Some districts in Houston have had to cut back on school bus service because of Prick Perry's funding cuts... Looks as though somebody wants this to spread statewide if not nationwide.
      • Lexa 9 mths ago
        You're just making excuses so you can keep up your lazy #$%$ lifestyle.
    • Lora  •  9 mths ago
      They actually spent money on something like this? Wow, just wow. Maybe they should be doing one on why we are losing our common sense.
    • Erica  •  9 mths ago
      I wish my son could walk to school but that's not happening. I'm not sending my kindergartener to walk 2.5 miles where 3/4 of the route does not have sidewalks.
    • Russell  •  9 mths ago
      Just link it to decreasing health care cost, like smoking, then make it illegal to drive the kids because of emissions oh second hand emissions effect as well and oh then to earth day.
      Simple fact, anyone living 30mins. from a school should walk to school.
    • trtx  •  9 mths ago
      I agree-stupid study. I loved walking and then riding my bike to school as a kid. And no, I wasn't fat. If our children are being snatched off the street, solve that! I rode the bus for 3 years because of the distance. Keep in mind that, at least here in Texas, we don't even require seat belts for our buses! Those things are rolling death traps.
    • Mike  •  9 mths ago
      When I was growing up in the 1960's and 70's, we walked everywhere. We did not have all of the electronic distractions that kids have now. Being inside was punishment. We played outside all day. Even as a young adult we were much more physically active than people are now. Most kids were skinny. It was rare when you saw a fat person.
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