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Backpack Safety is a Back-to-School Issue
Concern
over children and their backpacks continues to grow. An article
appearing in the September 8, 2003, issue of The Times Herald features
this problem by noting, "Trudging their way around the school campus
or to the bus stop, hunched-over kids could be dealing themselves a lifetime
of back pain, experts warn."
The US Consumer Product Safety Commission
estimates that 6,512 emergency room visits each year result from injuries
related to book bags. CPSC also cites the statistic that backpack-related
injuries are up 256 percent since 1996. The issue has become so
widespread, that the California State Assembly passed legislation that
forces school districts to develop ways of reducing the weight of students`
backpacks. Other states are also considering similar legislation.
In an online survey conducted last year
of more than 200 chiropractors responding from across North America
at www.backpacksafe.com, it
was learned that:
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89 percent of chiropractors surveyed responded
that they have seen patients (ages 5-18) reporting back, neck
or shoulder pain caused by heavy backpacks.
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71 percent of chiropractors presently seeing such
patients responded that they are currently seeing one to four
patients (ages 5-18) reporting back, neck or shoulder pain caused
by heavy backpacks.
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20 percent of chiropractors presently seeing such
patients responded that they are currently seeing five to nine
patients (ages 5-18) reporting back, neck or shoulder pain caused
by heavy backpacks.
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9 percent of chiropractors presently seeing such
patients responded that they are currently seeing 10 or more
patients (ages 5-18) due to back, neck or shoulder caused by
heavy backpacks.
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The American Chiropractic Association
has offered the following tips to help prevent backpack problems in school
children. Those tips include:
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Make sure your child's backpack
weighs no more than 5 to 10 percent of his or her body weight.
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The backpack should never hang more
than four inches below the waistline.
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Urge your child to wear both shoulder
straps, and wide, padded straps are very important.
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The shoulder straps should be adjustable
so the backpack can be fitted to your child's body.
The over-packing of backpacks was featured
in a recent study conducted in Italy. In this study it was found
that the average child carries a backpack that would be the equivalent
of a 39-pound burden for a 176-pound man, or a 29-pound load for a 132-pound
woman.
If your back pack does not weigh less than 10% of your
body weight,
please be checked by a Chiropractor. What seems to be a small problem
in school
will develop into a much larger problem later in life if nothing is done
about it now.
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