With
Kids, Unhealthy Habits "Hang Out" Together
In a second GEMS study, CNRC researcher Dr.
Russell Jago examined the relationship between young
girls' dietary behavior and activity levels.
Jago used sensitive
activity monitors to collect three days of physical
activity data from two hundred 8- to 10-year-old African-American
girls enrolled in the multi-center GEMS project. He
then compared three measurements of physical activity
recorded by the monitors to the girls' dietary recall
records, which detailed their intake of fruits, vegetables,
fat, calories, and sweetened beverages. The girls'
heights, weights, age, and information related to their
family's economic status were also collected.
"We
found that the less active girls had diets that contained
more fat,” said Jago, also an instructor
in the department of pediatrics at Baylor, "While
those who ate more carbohydrates were also more active."
Inactive
girls also had higher BMI values, suggesting that physical
activity helped to prevent weight gain. Jago's findings,
as well as those from other GEMS researchers working
at the CNRC, the University of Memphis, University
of Minnesota and Stanford University, were recently
published in a September supplement to the journal
Obesity Research.
Why girls who are
less active tend to consume diets higher in fat is
unclear.
"Perhaps girls who are more health-conscious
in general also choose to be more active and select
healthier diets," Jago said. "Or, perhaps
high-fat diets make girls feel sluggish, which makes
physical activity less attractive."

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