Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,717,777 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Most teen girls ignore exercise & nutritional needs: can you spot what's missing in your teen's lifestyle? Good nutrition and exercise top the list. (Lifestyle Corner).


Consider that just 20 percent of high school girls High School Girls (女子高生 Joshi Kōsei  are likely to have eaten five or more servings of fruits and vegetables in the past day, or to have drunk three or more glasses of milk a day. Or that despite major advances in women's sports since the passage of Title IX 30 years ago prohibited sex discrimination in any educational activity or program (including athletics), adolescent girls today are the least active segment of the American population. While 61 percent of male students have played on sports teams, just 50 percent of girls have. And while nearly three fourths of boys participate in activities that make them sweat and breathe hard for 20 or more minutes three or more days a week, just over half of girls do.

Yet both -- good nutrition and exercise -- are vital to your daughter's long-term health. Exercise, for instance, helps build and maintain healthy bones, muscles and joints, control weight and prevent or delay the development of high blood pressure. In fact, the amount of exercise a teenage girl gets between the ages of 12 and 18 is a critical factor in preventing hip fractures hip fracture Orthopedic surgery A femoral fracture which affects 1/6 white ♀–US during life Epidemiology 250,000/yr–US Specifics Proximal femur; 90+% femoral neck, intertrochanteric; 5-10% are subtrochanteric Risk factors Tall, thin ♀,  after menopause.

Good nutrition is also critical since a teenage girl grows faster during adolescence than at any other time in her life save for infancy. That requires a mountain of vitamins and minerals best found in food, as well as an average of 2,200 calories a day. But too often, teenage girls don't get enough of these crucial micronutrients This is a list of micronutrients.

Vitamins
  • Vitamin A (retinol)
  • Vitamin B complex
  • Vitamin B1 (thiamin)
  • Vitamin B2 (riboflavin)
. They're often deficient in calcium, for instance, because they dramatically cut back on the amount of milk they drink once they hit their teenage years. Yet almost half a woman's bone mass is formed during adolescence, and low intakes of calcium today may lead to osteoporosis tomorrow.

Girls also don't get enough iron. This is a problem because not only do they lose iron through menstruation menstruation, periodic flow of blood and cells from the lining of the uterus in humans and most other primates, occurring about every 28 days in women. Menstruation commences at puberty (usually between age 10 and 17). , but since they may be dieting or not eating a varied diet, they don't get enough iron-rich foods like red meat. While the health risks are clear -- anemia, for one -- one study found that even a mild iron deficiency iron deficiency A relative or absolute deficiency of iron which may be due to chelation in the GI tract, loss due to acute or chronic hemorrhage or dietary insufficiency Sources Meat, poultry, eggs, vegetables, cereals, especially if fortified with iron; per the  could result in lower test scores in math, one possible explanation for why teenage girls tend to do worse than boys in math.

That's why it's up to parents to provide a healthy diet for their daughters (and sons), one that includes at least five servings of fruits and vegetables a day and three, eight-ounce glasses of milk.

To get your teen connected to good nutrition:

* Make it easy. Keep nutritional snacks like cut-up fruit, pretzels, cheese sticks, individual yogurts and butter-free popcorn, on hand.

* Nix the soft drinks. Don't even keep them in the house.

* Get her in the kitchen. Put her in charge of some of the family's meals and grocery shopping so she learns how to prepare and enjoy healthful health·ful
adj.
1. Conducive to good health; salutary.

2. Healthy.



healthful·ness n.
 and nutritious food choices.

* Set an example. Even if family dinners are rushed, they can still be nutritious. When you eat out, encourage her to choose healthy selections, like salads and stir-fried vegetables. x

RELATED ARTICLE: Tips To Get Your Daughter Moving

Whether it's on organized teams or through individual sports or exercise programs, the main message to your daughter should be to get out and move. Here's how:

* Encourage her to try new, physically active activities, such as rock climbing rock climbing Sports medicine An 'extreme sport' in which the participant climbs rock formations, with or without ropes Injury risk Fractures, abrasions, death. See Extreme sports. , hiking, skiing or snowboarding.

* Make exercise a family affair--find a physical activity everyone enjoys and do it together.

* Give her a pedometer pe·dom·e·ter  
n.
An instrument that gauges the approximate distance traveled on foot by registering the number of steps taken.


pedometer
Noun
 and challenge her to collect at least 11,000 to 12,000 steps a day (the amount recommended for adolescents). Once she hits that figure, challenge her to do more.

By Pamela Peeke, MD, MPH

NWHRC NWHRC National Women's Health Resource Center  Medical Advisor

Dr. Peeke is a Pew PEW. A seat in a church separated from all others, with a convenient space to stand therein.
     2. It is an incorporeal interest in the real property. And, although a man has the exclusive right to it, yet, it seems, he cannot maintain trespass against a person
 Foundation Scholar in Nutrition and Metabolism, and Assistant clinical Professor of Medicine at the University of Maryland University of Maryland can refer to:
  • University of Maryland, College Park, a research-extensive and flagship university; when the term "University of Maryland" is used without any qualification, it generally refers to this school
 in Baltimore. She writes about health and lifestyle issues important to all women.
COPYRIGHT 2002 National Women's Health Resource Center
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Peeke, Pamela
Publication:National Women's Health Report
Date:Aug 1, 2002
Words:656
Previous Article:Teen birth control, weight loss & exercise. (Ask the Expert).
Next Article:Common questions about HRT. (Ask the Expert).



Related Articles
Like Father, Like Son.
SHUN JUNK? FAT CHANCE POOR DIETS PUTTING TEENS ON PATH TO OBESITY.(News)(Statistical Data Included)
STUDY: FEW GET ENOUGH VEGETABLES.(News)(Statistical Data Included)
TO YOUR HEALTH : BOOKS.(L.A. LIFE)
VEGGIES AT THE VARSITY LEVEL FOOD FAIR PROMOTES TEEN HEALTH.(News)
Nichter, Mimi. Fat talk; what girls and their parents say about dieting.(Book Review)(Young Adult Review)(Brief Article)
Fueling a teenage runner.(The Clinic)
Shape up!(Health/Graph It!)(school physical education)(Brief Article)
The Culprit and the Cure.(Book Review)
PROGRAM TO AID TEENS HAS NEW LIFE.(News)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles