1. Helping children with obesity 'move well' to move more: an applied clinical review
- Author
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Sarah P. Shultz, Margarita D. Tsiros, Heather K. Vincent, Nancy Getchell, Tsiros, MD, Vincent, HK, Getchell, N, and Shultz, SP
- Subjects
Musculoskeletal pain ,Pediatric Obesity ,medicine.medical_specialty ,obesity ,Movement ,Physical fitness ,Health literacy ,Motor Activity ,Physical function ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,physical function ,children ,Musculoskeletal Pain ,Humans ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Muscle Strength ,Child ,Exercise ,Physical Examination ,Swimming ,Motor skill ,Research evidence ,Single-Parent Family ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Actigraphy ,Flatfoot ,Obesity ,Bicycling ,Health Literacy ,Genu Valgum ,Motor Skills ,Physical Fitness ,Gait analysis ,Exercise Test ,Female ,Gait Analysis ,business - Abstract
Children with obesity experience musculoskeletal pain and reduced physical function and wellbeing, which collectively impact their fitness, strength, motor skills and even their ability to undertake simple tasks like walking and climbing stairs. Disrupting obesity-related disability may be critical to increasing children’s physical activity. Thus, barriers to movement should be considered by health practitioners to improve the efficacy of prescribed physical activity. This applied clinical review highlights key subjective and objective findings from a hypothetical case scenario, linking those findings to the research evidence, before exploring strategies to enhance movement and increase physical activity. Refereed/Peer-reviewed
- Published
- 2021