Study: Too Much TV Worsens Kids' Diabetes
Research Finds Kids With Type 1 Diabetes Who Watch Lots Of TV Have Harder Time Controlling Blood Sugar
-
Play CBS Video
Video
Dr. Senay On Avandia
Dr. Emily Senay sits down with Julie Chen to discuss the side effects of leading adult diabetes drug Avandia. Dr. Senay warns against stopping your prescription abruptly.
-
Video
A Closer Look At Avandia
Dr. Jon LaPook talks with Katie Couric about the study released by researchers at the Cleveland Clinic that shows people using Avandia are at higher risk of heart attacks.
-
Photo
(CBS/The Early Show)
-
Interactive
The Wiring Of The Brain
Find out what each part of the brain does, and when in a person’s life these areas are developed.
The findings, based on a study of children with Type 1 diabetes, lend support to the American Academy of Pediatrics' advice that children watch no more than two hours of TV daily, said lead author Dr. Hanna Margeirsdottir of the University of Oslo.
Type 1 diabetes is the less common form of the disease and used to be called juvenile diabetes. It is not related to obesity and is caused when the body cannot make insulin, which converts sugar from food into energy. People with Type 1 must take insulin daily and regulate their blood-sugar levels.
Snacking and overeating can increase blood-sugar levels; physical activity can lower them. While TV viewing is often accompanied by snacking, the researchers didn't examine diet or physical activity.
The study results "suggest that encouraging children with Type 1 diabetes to watch less television may be important for improved blood glucose control and better health outcomes," the study authors wrote.
Other experts said the study also might suggest something else. Diabetic children who already have consistently high blood-sugar levels could feel too sick to do much besides watch TV, said Jill Weissburg-Benchell, a psychologist and diabetes educator at Children's Memorial Hospital in Chicago.
"It's very clear that there is a relationship. Now the question is: What underlies that relationship," she said.
Results of the Oslo research will appear in the June edition of the journal Diabetes Care.
The study involved 538 children with an average age of 13. In Norway, about 25,000 people have Type 1 diabetes. In the United States, there are 3 million with the condition and about 30 million worldwide.
The study evaluated results of a routine test that measured average blood-sugar control over three months. There was a continuous increase in the level of blood sugar with every hour of TV watched, rising to the highest level for those who watched at least four hours daily.
The results didn't surprise Chicago diabetes educator Monica Joyce, who founded a basketball camp for diabetic children.
Campers typically are asked how much TV they watch and are taught "they can get much better blood sugars if they're active," Joyce said.
If the researchers' theory is right, turning off the TV could be added to a list of remedies "that are very low-cost to the health care system," said Dr. Francine Kaufman, head of a diabetes program at Children's Hospital in Los Angeles.
"This has got to be the social norm that it's just not acceptable for kids to be baby-sat by TV," she said.
© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



Well, how about reading, researching, doing their homework (if school age), writing stories, playing board games, arts & crafts, learning a new language, playing a musical instrument...
I'd go on but it seems pointless, because if their parents need to be told that there are other things in the world to do besides gluing their face to a TV screen then it's probably too late to help them. They're all doomed.
The more they move the better off they'll be in the long run. Even if its just hiking or walking.
The parents should feed them probperly, see that they get exercise of some sort, and help them read for fun and for knowledge.
The schools can help by having only healthy food and drink available, and having a half hour of exercise each day.
All this will not cure the diabetes but in the long run it will help in control of the sugars and will help with the side efects associated with diabetes.
THank You