Choose backpacks to help keep children pain free
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We’ve all seen that child with what has to be a burdensome backpack. But parents may not know that their children can suffer short- and long-term pain from an overloaded backpack or from carrying a backpack the wrong way.
Dr. Will Evans, a professor and head of the Department of Food Science, Nutrition and Health Promotion at Mississippi State University, practiced chiropractic health care for 17 years before earning a second degree in health promotion and epidemiology.
“The stress of back pack use over a number of years can be cumulative and cause pressure on disks and spinal joints that could lead to chronic pain,” he said.
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Evans offered the following tips for choosing and using a backpack:
Choose the correct size.
- Select one no wider or longer than the child’s torso.
- Never allow it to drop more than 4 inches below the waist.
- Look for adjustable, padded shoulder straps and a padded back.
- Chest and waist straps can help distribute the backpack’s weight more evenly.
Teach children to use them properly.
- Load the backpack each night with only the items needed for the next day.
- Wear the backpack on both shoulders.
- Carry laptops or handheld devices in a separate handheld bag.
- Pack and unpack the backpack on a table.
- Take off the backpack when standing for long periods of time.
- Lift with the knees when picking it up off the floor.
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Evans recommends backpacks weigh no more than 10 to 15 percent of a child’s body weight, which adheres to guidelines set by the Congress of Chiropractic State Associations.
Find more information, check out these websites:
Working-Well.org
University of California, Los Angeles
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