(Press-News.org) San Diego, CA, December 11, 2012 – The average American child from age 8 to 18 watches about 4.5 hours of TV each day. Seventy percent have a TV in the bedroom and about one-third of youth aged 6-19 is considered obese. Previous studies have shown that TV viewing time during childhood and adolescence continues into adulthood, resulting in overweight and elevated total cholesterol. An investigative team from the Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge, LA reports new study findings, establishing the relationship between having and watching TV in the bedroom and childhood obesity, specifically high waist circumference.
"The established association between TV and obesity is predominantly based on BMI. The association between TV and fat mass, adiposity stored in specific depots (including abdominal subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue), and cardiometabolic risk, is less well understood," says lead investigator Peter T. Katzmarzyk, PhD. "It is hypothesized that higher levels of TV viewing and the presence of a TV in the bedroom are associated with depot-specific adiposity and cardiometabolic risk."
Between 2010 and 2011, 369 children and adolescents aged 5-18 in Baton Rouge, representing a balance between gender, ethnicity, age, and BMI status, were evaluated for a variety of factors, such as waist circumference, resting blood pressure, fasting triglycerides, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and glucose, fat mass, and stomach fat.
Statistical analysis of the data developed produced two models. Together, these models revealed that children with a TV in the bedroom were more likely to watch more TV. These children also were shown to have more fat and subcutaneous adipose tissue mass, as well as higher waist circumference, when compared with their peers who did not have a bedroom TV. Study participants with a TV in the bedroom and those who watched TV more than two hours a day were each associated with up to 2.5 times the odds of the highest levels of fat mass. Viewing five or more hours a day produced an association of two times the odds of being in the top quartile for visceral adipose tissue mass. Further, a bedroom TV associated with three times the odds of elevated cardiometabolic risk, elevated waist circumference, and elevated triglycerides.
"There was a stronger association between having a TV in the bedroom versus TV viewing time, with the adiposity and health outcomes," notes study co-author Amanda Staiano, PhD. "A bedroom TV may create additional disruptions to healthy habits, above and beyond regular TV viewing. For instance, having a bedroom TV is related to lower amounts of sleep and lower prevalence of regular family meals, independent of total TV viewing time. Both short sleep duration and lack of regular family meals have been related to weight gain and obesity."
### END
Bedroom TV viewing increases risk of obesity in children
More than 2 hours of TV a day adds significantly to children's waist size, American Journal of Preventive Medicine reports
2012-12-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New coronavirus has many potential hosts, could pass from animals to humans repeatedly
2012-12-11
The SARS epidemic of 2002-2003 was short-lived, but a novel type of human coronavirus that is alarming public health authorities can infect cells from humans and bats alike, a fact that could make the animals a continuing source of infection, according to a study to be published in in mBio®, the online open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology, on December 11. The new coronavirus, called hCoV-EMC, is blamed for five deaths and several other cases of severe disease originating in countries in the Middle East. According to the new results, hCoV-EMC uses ...
Why do so many women leave biology?
2012-12-11
One common idea about why there are fewer women professors in the sciences than men is that women are less willing to work the long hours needed to succeed. Writing in the January Issue of BioScience, Shelley Adamo of Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia, Canada, rejects this argument. She points out that women physicians work longer hours than most scientists, under arguably more stressful conditions, but that this does not deter women from entering medicine.
Why, then, do women leave the academic track in biology at higher rates than they leave the medical profession? ...
Device helps children with disabilities access tablets
2012-12-11
Imagine not being able to touch a touch-screen device. Tablets and smartphones—with all their educational, entertaining and social benefits—would be useless.
Researchers at Georgia Tech are trying to open the world of tablets to children whose limited mobility makes it difficult for them to perform the common pinch and swipe gestures required to control the devices.
Ayanna Howard, professor of electrical and computer engineering, and graduate student Hae Won Park have created Access4Kids, a wireless input device that uses a sensor system to translate physical movements ...
Kinsey research: Postpartum women less stressed by threats unrelated to the baby
2012-12-11
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Following the birth of a child, new mothers may have an altered perception of stresses around them, showing less interest in threats unrelated to the baby. This change to the neuroendocrine circuitry could help the mothers adapt to the additional stress often accompanying newborns, say researchers from Indiana University's Kinsey Institute and the University of Zurich.
When viewing disturbing images during the study, postpartum women reported less distress and demonstrated less activity in their amygdala, the part of the brain that controls emotional ...
Moffitt researchers say effective immunotherapy for melanoma hinges on blocking suppressive factors
2012-12-11
Researchers at the Moffitt Cancer Center have found that delayed tumor growth and enhanced survival of mice bearing melanoma were possible by blocking the reconstitution of myeloid-derived suppressor cells and Tregs (suppressors of anti-tumor activity) after total body irradiation had eliminated them. Blocking myeloid-derived suppressor cells and regulatory T-cell reconstitution improved adoptive T-cell therapy, an immunotherapy designed to suppress tumor activity.
The study appears in the December issue of The Journal of Immunology.
"Melanoma is a leading cause of ...
The Largest Voiceover Conference in the Southeastern United States Comes to Atlanta, Georgia March 2013
2012-12-11
If you're going to host a voiceover industry event, you may as well invite the very best and most talented individuals in the voiceover industry. That's exactly what VoiceoverCity, LLC has done by making plans to host their 1st annual voiceover conference in Atlanta, Georgia. The event has been designed to educate, inspire, and connect voice-talent from around the country in a fun and exciting way.
The idea to have the conference here in Atlanta started when VoiceoverCity founder, Gerald Griffith, notice the need to provide a way for voice-talent in the southeastern ...
Korea Premier Products Showcase 2012 to Follow Grand Opening of New K-HIT Plaza Store in New Jersey
2012-12-11
December 20, 2012 is poised to be a big day at Garden State Plaza. On this momentous day, the new K-HIT Plaza retail store will open featuring products from top Korean companies, and immediately following this grand opening will be Korea Premier Products Showcase 2012 - an exclusive event that gives local buyers, sales reps, product developers, and merchandisers the opportunity to meet with executives and representatives from the featured Korean companies to discuss potential partnership and business opportunities.
Set in one of the nation's largest malls, K-HIT Plaza ...
RE/MAX Platinum Realty Opens Office in Lakewood Ranch, Florida
2012-12-11
RE/MAX Platinum Realty has opened its fifth office in the San Marco Plaza at 8215 Natures Way, Suite 109, in Lakewood Ranch. The new office is expected to grow to 20 agents within the year, and features a high-tech showing room, touchscreen listing gallery and social media showcase room.
Broker/Owner Bryan Guentner is a Certified Luxury Specialist (CLS), Certified International Property Specialist (CIPS), Certified Residential Specialist (CRS) and a Guild Member of the Institute for Luxury Home Marketing. Realtor/Owner Cheri Guentner is a Graduate Realtor Institute ...
Capital Safety Australia Introduces The DBI-SALA Rollgliss Rescue & Escape Device
2012-12-11
Capital Safety, home of the DBI-SALA and PROTECTA brands of fall protection equipment has announced the launch of their new DBI-SALA Rollgliss R520 Rescue & Escape Device. This new descender is the world's first conventional twin brake rescue & escape descender of its kind.
The Rollgliss R520 is a state of the art, easy-to-use fully automatic controlled descent device with a dual braking system that offers a higher degree of safety when using the descender. Unlike friction based descenders, it provides controlled descent self-rescue regardless of the user's weight ...
The Good Life Kitchen _http://www.goodlifekitchen.com_ Has Recently Opened its Doors in Norwell, the South Shore's First Recreational Cooking School and Catering Company
2012-12-11
Good Life Kitchen, located at 433 Washington Street (Route 53) in Norwell, is a state-of-the-art culinary center with 3 kitchens in one offering year-round cooking classes for up to 24 people per session and providing customized catering services for daily corporate functions and special events. The company's founder Chef Bernard Kinsella has been sharing his culinary expertise with students of all ages for more than 25 years making cooking easy, enjoyable, healthy and cost effective.
Good Like Kitchen's "hands-on" cooking programs are designed for individuals, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Jumping workouts could help astronauts on the moon and Mars, study in mice suggests
Guardian molecule keeps cells on track – new perspectives for the treatment of liver cancer
Solar-powered device captures carbon dioxide from air to make sustainable fuel
Bacteria evolved to help neighboring cells after death, new research reveals
Lack of discussion drives traditional gender roles in parenthood
Scientists discover mechanism driving molecular network formation
Comprehensive global study shows pesticides are major contributor to biodiversity crisis
A simple supplement improves survival in patients with a new type of heart disease
Uncovering novel transcriptional enhancers in neuronal development and neuropsychiatric disorders
IR Sant Pau study reveals immune system’s crucial role in ALS at cellular level
Brain rhythms can predict seizure risk of Alzheimer’s disease patients, study finds
Scientists develop innovative DNA hydrogels for sustained drug release
Paramedics facing challenging end-of-life care demands
Worm study shows hyperactivated neurons cause aging-related behavioral decline
Combining millions of years of evolution with tech wizardry: the cyborg cockroach
Discrimination can arise from individual, random difference, study finds
Machine learning boosts accuracy of solar power forecasts
Researchers create chemotaxic biomimetic liquid metallic leukocytes with versatile behavior
Beyond DNA: How environments influence biology to make things happen
Alarming gap on girls’ sport contributes to low participation rates
New study adds to evidence of stroke and heart attack risk with some hormonal contraceptives
Can artificial intelligence save the Great Barrier Reef?
Critical thinking training can reduce belief in conspiracy theories
Babies respond positively to smell of foods experienced in the womb
New blood-clotting disorder identified by McMaster University researchers
Vitamin E succinate controls tumor growth and enhances immunotherapy effects
University of Tennessee physicist named Cottrell Scholar
Simple, quick test can predict fall risk in older adults six months in advance
Mass General Brigham researchers awarded ARPA-H funding to enhance health outcomes in rural America
Semaglutide shows promise in reducing cravings for alcohol, heavy drinking
[Press-News.org] Bedroom TV viewing increases risk of obesity in childrenMore than 2 hours of TV a day adds significantly to children's waist size, American Journal of Preventive Medicine reports