For Immediate Release
Contact:
John M. Martino
Phone Number: (215) 895-1186
Date: 09/12/02
Heavy
School Backpacks May Be Too Much For Children To Shoulder
-- A University of the Sciences in Philadelphia
Health Tip --
The
quintessential picture of a young student slouched forward while toting
a burdensome backpack to school is not the image occupational and physical
therapists would like to see. Schoolchildren
and teens all over the country carry backpacks filled with textbooks and
other heavy items that can cause physical strains and pains.
The U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission estimated that more
than 3,300 children, aged 5-14 years, were treated in emergency rooms
for injuries related to backpacks in 1998.
This does not include the long-term effects, such as neck and back
ailments, which backpacks can cause if used incorrectly.
These numbers may increase if parents and school officials are
not educated in backpack safety.
"Heavy backpacks breed poor posture in children,"
says Dr. Paula Kramer, chair of the Department
of Occupational Therapy at University of the Sciences in Philadelphia.
"Children have to bend forwards to compensate for the heavy load
on their backs which throw off their center of gravity.
This increased weight puts a strain on their backs and
pressure on their disks.
We want parents and children to realize the right ways to use backpacks."
And
what exactly are the right ways?
According to many doctors, physical and occupational therapists,
children should learn how to select the right backpack and the proper
ways to load and wear it. Here
are some helpful tips from the American Occupational Therapy Association
(AOTA):
-
Select
a backpack that is appropriate to the child's size and age.
-
Select
a backpack that has well-padded shoulder straps.
-
Children
should not carry more than 15% of their body weight in the backpack.
-
Load
the heaviest items closest to the child's back to help distribute
weight evenly.
-
Always
wear both shoulder straps to distribute weight evenly.
-
Adjust
shoulder straps so that the backpack fits snugly to the back.
-
The
bottom of the backpack should rest in the curve of the lower back.
According
to Teaching Elementary Physical Health, more than 40 million students
carry school backpacks. Dr.
Kramer says that if the majority of these students are carrying their
backpacks incorrectly, then physical and occupational therapists will
be treating many more individuals for neck and back ailments.
"We
already have a big population of people complaining about neck and back
pains," she says. "If children
keep wearing backpacks that are heavy and packed improperly, they may
be causing themselves a lifetime of aches and pains.
We want to protect our children and their development.
We need to stress this to parents and then maybe we will see the
number of children having achy backs decrease."
AOTA
is joining in the mission to alert parents of school-aged children and
school officials. On September
25, AOTA will sponsor School Backpack Awareness Day.
This pilot program, which will target five major media markets,
will entail a "weigh in" for children to make sure their backpacks weigh
no more than 15%. Information
about the correct ways to select, load and wear backpacks will be distributed.
"This
program is a great start," says Dr. Kramer, "but it should not be a one-day
occurrence. I'd love to see
this be an annual event."
To
arrange an interview with Dr. Kramer, contact John M. Martino at (215)
895-1186 or e-mail at j.martin@usip.edu.
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