|
|
|
Date: |
|
Feb 08, 2010
|
|
News Title: |
|
Family meals, adequate sleep and limited TV may lower childhood obesity
|
|
Source: |
|
Ohio State University
|
|
City: |
|
Columbus
|
|
Country: |
|
United States
|
|
Categories: |
|
Medicine, Nutrition, Pediatrics, Preventive Medicine
|
|
News Profile: |
A new national study suggests that preschool-aged children are likely to have a lower risk for obesity if they regularly engage in one or more of three specific household routines: eating dinner as a family, getting adequate sleep and limiting their weekday television viewing time. In a large sample of the U.S. population, the study showed that 4-year-olds living in homes with all three routines had an almost 40 percent lower prevalence of obesity than did children living in homes that practiced none of these routines. Other studies have linked obesity to the individual behaviors of excessive TV viewing, a lack of sleep and, to a lesser extent, a low frequency of family meals.......> Full story
|