[ti:More Physical Education, but Also More Injuries in Class] [ar:Steve Ember] [al:Education Report] [by:51VOA.COM] [00:00.00]This is the VOA Special English [00:03.06]Education Report. [00:04.75]Too much eating. [00:05.91]Too many unhealthy foods. [00:08.70]Too many advertisements [00:10.84]for food. Too little activity. [00:14.02]Different explanations are offered [00:16.37]for America's weight problem [00:18.56]-- a problem increasingly shared [00:20.85]by other countries. [00:22.89]Almost one-fifth of American children [00:25.79]and teenagers are overweight. [00:29.07]Schools have been urged [00:31.46]to increase physical education, [00:33.90]an important tool for public health. [00:36.78]And many have. [00:38.45]Yet now comes a study showing an increase [00:41.92]in the number of injuries in "phys ed" class. [00:46.06]Injuries increased one hundred fifty percent [00:49.99]between nineteen ninety-seven [00:52.39]and two thousand seven. [00:54.53]The study involved injuries treated [00:57.62]in hospital emergency departments. [01:00.80]Only two percent were serious. [01:04.09]The researchers did not try [01:06.27]to identify the causes of the increase, [01:09.47]but they have some theories. [01:11.81]Lara McKenzie from Ohio State University [01:15.65]was the lead researcher. [01:17.59]She says one possibility is a decrease [01:21.52]in the number of school nurses [01:23.76]during the period they studied. [01:26.55]For example, [01:27.74]a two thousand four study showed [01:30.83]that the number of school nurses nationally [01:33.83]failed to meet federal guidelines. [01:37.21]Schools without a nurse [01:39.60]on duty may be more likely [01:42.25]to send an injured child to a hospital. [01:45.78]Another possible reason [01:48.47]for more injuries is a change [01:51.10]in the traditional idea [01:53.24]of physical education. [01:55.78]This "New P.E." expands the kinds of sports [02:00.21]that are taught. But activities [02:02.73]that some schools offer now, [02:05.22]like rock climbing walls and skateboarding, [02:09.29]can also expand the risks, [02:11.93]says Cheryl Richardson. [02:13.87]She is with the National Association [02:16.45]for Sport and Physical Education. [02:19.34]Also, she says not all states require P.E. [02:24.52]teachers to be specially trained. [02:27.35]Untrained teachers could be less likely [02:30.99]to recognize unsafe conditions. [02:34.42]Cheryl Richardson also points [02:37.22]to one of the study's findings [02:39.46]-- that injuries are often the result [02:42.44]of contact with a person or a structure. [02:46.48]This tells her that the teachers [02:48.97]were not giving each student [02:51.16]enough space to move around safely. [02:54.80]Six activities produced seventy percent [02:59.23]of all injuries: running, basketball, [03:03.31]football, volleyball, soccer and gymnastics. [03:08.84]The study appeared online this week [03:12.32]in Pediatrics, the journal of [03:16.94]the American Academy of Pediatrics. [03:20.07]The researchers say larger class sizes [03:24.16]are another possible reason [03:26.84]for the increase in injuries. [03:29.54]Larger classes can mean less supervision. [03:33.97]The National Association for Sport [03:37.25]and Physical Education says [03:39.54]twenty to thirty students [03:42.23]in a P.E. class should be the limit. [03:46.02]And that's the VOA Special English [03:49.86]Education Report, [03:51.80]written by Nancy Steinbach. [03:53.50]I'm Steve Ember.