Puberty a gateway to heart disease for Canada's teens
One in five young teens has high blood pressure. Elevated cholesterol levels increasing at alarming rate.
"This study is further evidence of an accelerating decline in the heart health of Canada's teens," says
The study investigated the heart health of 20,719 grade 9 students aged 14 and 15 years.
The study found that, between 2002 and 2008, the rates of high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and obesity in these teens were alarmingly high and, even more worrisome, increasing over time.
Risk factors of Canadian 14 and 15 year olds ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Grade 9 students with 2002 2008 Increase from 2002 to 2008 ------------------------------------------------------------------------- One or more cardiovascular risk factors 17% 21% +4% ------------------------------------------------------------------------- High blood pressure 19% 17% -2% ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Elevated cholesterol levels 9% 16% +7% ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Obesity 11% 13% +2% -------------------------------------------------------------------------
"It is shocking that one in five 14 and 15 year olds has high blood pressure," says Heart and Stroke Foundation spokesperson
High blood pressure is the leading cause of stroke and a major risk factor for heart disease. "We're ringing the alarm bell. Every child has the right to grow up healthy," says
The teens' elevated cholesterol rates had the greatest increase, accelerating from nine to 16 per cent in six years. "An increase of this magnitude in this age group is astonishing," says
"One of the things we already know is that it is the number of risk factors you have that really accelerates the whole process," he says. "And when you have a healthy looking kid in front of you, it's easy to miss the invisible time bomb waiting do go off."
Lifestyle factors of Canadian 14 and 15 year olds ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Grade 9 students' levels of 2002 2008 Change from 2002-2008 ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Physical activity 28% 22% -6% (Physically active for 90 minutes at least five days a week) ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sedentary behaviour 22% 24% +2% (20 or more hours per week of TV or video games) -------------------------------------------------------------------------
"Unfortunately, our kids' gaming superheroes are getting better workouts than they are," says
"With changing technologies, we need to exercise our bodies more than our brains," she says. "Over 50 per cent of Canadian children between the ages of five and 17 aren't active enough to support optimal health and development - and over a quarter of our children and youth are overweight or obese."
They don't do any better on the nutrition front: only half get the daily recommended amount of fruit and vegetables.
Healthy behaviours including regular physical activity that begin at a young age and continue throughout life are important to achieving and maintaining a healthy weight.
"You don't have to try to fit something else into their busy days," she says. "You simply need to encourage children to trade an hour of inactivity for an hour of activity."
He says that one of the great deficiencies in
"We need comprehensive and integrated Canadian guidelines for keeping our children healthy and we need them soon because this type of study is showing the worst is yet to come," says
The data were collected by Heart Niagara Inc., a nonprofit corporation which partnered with school boards and public health officials in a grade 9 physical education curriculum enrichment program designed to prevent chronic disease.
They assessed students' blood pressure, height and weight, and blood cholesterol, capturing pretty well all of the grade 9 students in the system.
"It took a collaborative effort to collect this data. Working together is key to turning around the heart health of our children," says
Statements and conclusions of study authors are solely those of the study authors and do not necessarily reflect Foundation or CCS policy or position. The Heart and Stroke Foundation of
The Heart and Stroke Foundation (heartandstroke.ca), a volunteer-based health charity, leads in eliminating heart disease and stroke and reducing their impact through the advancement of research and its application, the promotion of healthy living, and advocacy.
For further information: and/or interviews, contact the CCC 2009 MEDIA OFFICE AT (780) 969-0453 (Oct 24-28) OR Pumpkin PR (780) 470-5300 or [email protected]; Congress information and media registration is at www.cardiocongress.org; After October 28, 2009, contact: Jane-Diane Fraser, Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, (613) 569-4361 ext 273, [email protected]
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