Friday, February 08, 2008

A good night's sleep reduces child obesity

Whitney Everett/A good night’s sleep reduces risk of child obesity/February 2, 2008/post 4


The article that I chose to talk about this week is from Washington DC. It talks about a study that has been conducted about child obesity and the fact that studies show that children that get a good nights sleep is less likely to be obese rather than children that do not. It says that each extra hour of sleep cuts a childs risk of being overweight by nine percent. It also contrasts this by saying that children that get the least sleep had a ninety two percent increase in being overweight than children that got sleep. Research recommends that children under five should sleep eleven hours or more a day, while children ages five to ten should get ten or more hours of sleep, and children older than ten should get nine or more a day.

I think this article was very interesting because I never knew that sleep had an impact on your weight. I think that children as young as ten should get an adequate amount of sleep a night or they are not going to be well rested for the next day and this is going to cause problems with them during the day. I never thought about weight problems and what sleep can do with this issue. I would like to learn more about this because this is the first time I have heard about it. In my opinion, I would think that a lot of sleep for a child would not be good for the child’s weight because they are not active and are not using calories while they are sleeping.



http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5jzG2XlwdhTU3HmVpYV7sCddy9Wcg

2 comments:

Renee Beaulieu said...

I like this article. I agree that sleep does have a huge impact on children and the relationship of obesity. Children need sleep to have energy. The need energy to have there metabolism at a normal rate of a young child.

Max Peck said...

Man, you know how it is. You get no sleep at all and the next day you can't stand the thought of moving, let alone exercising. Also, fat kids stay up late watching YouTube and eating bowls of Caramel Kisses, and thus the correlation is birthed.