Weight, Exercise May Affect Children's Thinking Skills
Kids who participate in dance or sports better able to pay attention and solve problems, research suggests
MONDAY, Nov. 2, 2015 (HealthDay News) -- Children's weight and physical activity levels may affect their thinking and learning skills, a new study suggests.
Researchers studied 45 normal-weight children, aged 7 to 11; 24 of them were active and the rest were not. Children were considered active if they took part in organized activities, such as swimming, gymnastics, soccer or dance for more than an hour a week.
The study also included 45 overweight and inactive children.
As expected, active, normal-weight kids had less body fat and a lower resting heart rate than overweight, inactive children. But the researchers also found that normal-weight active children did better on tests of mental skills -- such as planning and paying attention -- than their inactive counterparts.
The findings were published online recently in the journal Pediatric Exercise Science.
While the study found an association between physical activity and mental skills in children, it did not find a cause-and-effect relationship.
"Activity made a difference even among normal-weight kids. That verifies that physical activity makes a difference in brain function," study author Catherine Davis, a clinical health psychologist at the Medical College of Georgia, in Augusta, said in a college news release.
The good news is that children -- with the help of families and schools -- can boost their physical activity levels, she added.
"If they can cut some of the empty calories out of their diet and pick up the pace on physical activity, they may grow into their weight," Davis said.
In addition, Davis pointed out that the study focused on...Continue reading
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