Checking unhealthy behaviour as a teenager may cut obesity risk later

IANS  |  Toronto 

It's not only junk food, but a combination of unhealthy behaviours like sedentary lifestyle in teenagers that increases the risk of being in adulthood, say researchers emphasising the need to focus on more than eating habits to combat the epidemic.

The study found that the calorie intake among adolescents has not changed, but habits such as exercising, smoking, drug use and alcohol consumption have increased over time.

Therefore, it is important to target these risky behaviours together, and early, before they become habits.

"Adolescents with often maintain their weight status into adulthood, increasing their risk of developing cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and high blood pressure," said Rachel Laxer, doctoral student at the in Ontario,

"Public practitioners should be targeting clusters of risky behaviours using a comprehensive and multi-pronged approach," Laxer added.

For the study, published in Plos One, the research team included school students between 13 to 17 years of age, in grades nine and ten.

Based on their reported behaviour, the teenagers were classified as typical high school athletes, inactive high screen-users ("screenagers"), moderately active substance users, or conscious.

The results noted that although the four groups saw similar increases to their weight status over the years that they were followed, students in the conscious group had the healthiest body weight at the beginning of the study.

"Intervening and modifying unhealthy behaviours earlier might have a greater impact than during adolescence. promotion strategies targeting higher risk youth as they enter secondary school might be the best way to prevent or delay the onset of obesity, and might have better public outcomes over the longer term," Laxer said.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, February 28 2018. 17:30 IST
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