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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: 0.21 + teens + fail  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


WELT ONLINE
Hexcel Reports 2008 Second Quarter Results
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BLOTTER: Police reports published July 7
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[PDF] How Teen Sexual Behavior Responds to Sexually Transmitted Disease Risks
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Cross-Resistance among Nonnucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors Limits Recycling Efavirenz … -
A Antinori, M Zaccarelli, A Cingolani, F Forbici, … - AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses, 2002 - liebertonline.com
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Teen Internet Use: Relating Social Perceptions and Cognitive Models to Behavior -
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Subsidized Contraception, Fertility, and Sexual Behavior -
MS KEARNEY, PB LEVINE - NBER Working Paper, 2007 - papers.ssrn.com
... We then examine Vital Statistics birth data from 1990 to 2003 and determine that
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Why teens do not benefit from work experience programs. Evidence from brother comparisons
EM Foster - Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 1995 - JSTOR
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Condom use among high-risk heterosexual teens: A longitudinal analysis using the theory of reasoned …
DM Morrison, SA Baker, MR Gillmore - Psychology & Health, 1998 - informaworld.com
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[DOC] Economic Policy Institute -
J Schmitt - noapparentmotive.org
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Driving impairments in teens and adults with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder -
RA Barkley - Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 2004 - Elsevier
... 0.041; drunk in past 3 months: r = -0.21, N = 160 ... warn adults with ADHD and parents
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[PDF] Does a ?Teen-birth?have Longer-term Impacts on the Mother? Evidence from the 1970 British Cohort … -
J Ermisch, D Pevalin - Institute for Social and Economic Research, Working Paper, 2003 - iser.essex.ac.uk
... and P B (x) is estimated as the proportion of women having a teen-birth ... 2 Heckman
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Direct and Nondirect Communication of Maternal Beliefs to Adolescents: Adolescent Motivations for … -
PJ Dittus, J Jaccard, VV Gordon - Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 1999 - Blackwell Synergy
... has been noted that many adolescents fail to use ... that much of this research had failed
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Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Study: A third of teens would fail fitness test

 

 

CHICAGO — About a third of U.S. teens would flunk a treadmill fitness test, a new study shows, meaning that more than 7 million youngsters could face higher risks for heart disease later in life.

While that finding is not surprising, given previous research showing that about 16 percent of U.S. schoolchildren are seriously overweight, it's "very concerning," said Dr. David Ludwig, director of the obesity program at Children's Hospital Boston.

Ludwig, who was not involved in the study, called treadmill tests a good measure of fitness. He said the results show that "at a time in life when adolescents and young adults should be at peak levels of fitness, there's in fact a very high prevalence ... of very low fitness."

The analysis of nationally representative data from government health surveys by Northwestern University researchers found that 34 percent of girls and boys ages 12 to 19 showed a poor level of cardiovascular fitness on an 8-minute treadmill test.

The tests became faster and steeper after a 2-minute warmup, and a rapidly increasing heart rate after just a short period of exercising defined poor fitness.

The study included 2,205 adolescents and 3,110 adults ages 20 to 49 who participated in the 1999-2002 surveys.

About 14 percent of the adults showed a poor level of fitness, but that underestimates the true number who are unfit because adults with high blood pressure and other cardiovascular risk factors were excluded from the treadmill test, said lead author Mercedes Carnethon.

Teens and adults with poor fitness were two to four times more likely to be overweight or obese than those considered moderately or highly fit, the study found. Waist size, cholesterol levels and blood pressure also were higher in those in the low fitness category.

The study appears in today's Journal of the American Medical Association.

"We've known for a long time that there's a trend toward declining physical activity" among U.S. children, said Carnethon, an assistant professor of preventive medicine at Northwestern. The study shows this "is now being reflected by the prevalence of poor fitness."

Average cholesterol levels were about 10 points higher for youngsters in the low fitness category than for those considered highly fit. Blood pressure differences between categories was not as dramatic.

About 4 percent of the girls and almost 2 percent of the boys already had high blood pressure. Also, 2 percent of girls and 7 percent of boys had metabolic syndrome, a cluster of symptoms that includes big waists and higher levels for blood pressure, blood sugar and cholesterol, which increase the risk for heart disease.

"While adolescents aren't at risk for heart disease in the short term," Carnethon said, "this has important implications for the long-term health of youth in the United States."

Copyright © 2005 The Seattle Times Company

 
 
 
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