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Physical Activity Runs in the Family

When it comes to physical activity, preteens tend to follow in
their parents' footsteps, a British study shows.

It's a win-win habit for parents to be physically active, note the
researchers.

"Encouraging physical activity in parents may also influence their
children to become more active, with the added advantage that physically active
parents are healthier," they write.

Data came from more than 5,400 kids and their parents who took part in a
long-term health study.

The parents completed questionnaires that began during pregnancy .

When children were 11 or 12 years old, they wore a device called an
actigraph for a week to record their activity.

The preteens were more physically active if their moms walked briskly or
swam while pregnant, and if at least one parent was physically active when the
child was 21 months old.

The link between parental and preteen physical activity was
"modest," write the University of Bristol research associate Calum
Mattocks, MSc, and colleagues.

But findings held when they considered other factors, such as the mothers'
age, years of education, and social class.

The study appears online in BMJ, formerly called the British
Medical Journal
.


(How active are you with your kids? Join the discussion on either the Parenting:
Preschoolers & Grade Schoolers message board or the Parenting:
Preteens & Teens message board.)

By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang
©2005-2006 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved

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