Lighten Up! Heavy Backpacks A Weighty Load For Children To Bear Libraries
Main Category: Bones / OrthopedicsAlso Included In: Pediatrics / Children's Health
Article Date: 18 Sep 2006 - 0:00 PDT
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While that new backpack your son or daughter just got for the new school year might seem harmless, there is the potential for a lifetime of back and neck ailments if not loaded or worn correctly, according to Dr. Paula Kramer, chair of the Department of Occupational Therapy at University of the Sciences in Philadelphia.
"While children's bodies are resilient, even they can't take the day after day stress caused by a backpack that is too heavy or worn improperly," Kramer said. "Even if the backpacks are made lighter, if the weight is not distributed correctly, there can be the prospect of long-term problems."
According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, more than 7,000 emergency room visits in 2001 were related to backpacks and book bags with approximately half of those injuries occurring in children 5 to 14 years old.
"Parents should remember when they help their children to pack their backpacks, the heaviest items should be placed closest to the child's body and as close to their center of gravity as possible," Kramer explained. "Otherwise, not only will the heavy backpacks cause strain on backs and necks, but it will also make the child unsafe because it throws off their center of gravity."
The American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) concurs with a 2002 study in Spine that loaded backpacks weigh no more than 15 percent of a student's body weight. For example, a student weighing 100 pounds should carry no more that 15 pounds.
While it might not be the fashionable thing to do, backpacks should be worn with both shoulder straps, preferably ones that are well-padded, and adjusted so that the straps fit snugly. If the backpack comes with a waist belt, that too should worn to help distribute the weight. Ideally, it's best to use backpacks with wheels when a heavy load is unavoidable.
"When you have heavy backpacks, it's actually better to use ones with wheels," Dr. Kramer said. "However, some schools ban them and children don't consider them cool. It's a real conscious trade off for schools. If you don't allow backpacks with wheels, then you have to find some way to lighten up the backpacks. You have to require less text books to be taken home at night."
AOTA is sponsoring a National School Backpack Awareness Day on Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2006. The day will educate children, parents, school administrators, teachers, and communities about the serious health effects on children from backpacks that are too heavy or worn improperly.
The program will entail a "weigh in" for children to make sure their backpacks weigh no more than 15 percent of their body weight. Information about the correct ways to select, load and wear backpacks will be distributed. For more information, visit http://www.aota.org.
University of the Sciences in Philadelphia is a private, coeducational institution founded in 1821 as Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, the first college of pharmacy in North America. Comprising four colleges across a broad range of majors, USP specializes in educating students for rewarding careers through its undergraduate, graduate and doctoral degree programs in the health and related sciences.
University of the Sciences in Philadelphia
600 S. 43rd St.
Philadelphia, PA 19104
United States
University of the Sciences in Philadelphia
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22 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/52056.php>
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/52056.php.
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Parent
posted by L Tehseldar on 26 Sep 2007 at 7:24 pmIn my opinion legislation should be passed in all states so that our children are protected. Their health and overall well being should be first priority. There are solutions to this problem, but not real concern from the parents and the schools. If our children are not healthy how can they succeed in school anyway?
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