Obese children give researchers the runaround in exercise study

Children taking part in a study to measure how much exercise they do fooled researchers by attaching their pedometers to their…

Children taking part in a study to measure how much exercise they do fooled researchers by attaching their pedometers to their pet dogs, the BBC has reported.

About 200 children in east London were given pedometers to automatically count how many steps they walked and ran.

Mile End Centre for Sports and Exercise Medicine was surprised by the activity levels recorded in some obese children.

Prof Nicola Maffulli said: “Then we realised they were attaching the pedometers to their dogs’ collars.”

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The pilot study in Whitechapel required 11- and 12-year-olds to clip a pedometer to their waists, with researchers at the centre collecting the readings by satellite.

“But after a week we found there were some kids who were extremely active but still obese,” said Prof Maffulli. It was “not unheard of” for participants in previous studies to manipulate the readings of pedometers, he added.

Once adjusted to take into account the help from pets, the study indicated that boys in the borough walk or run 12,620 steps a day, below the recommended level of 15,000. More than a third of 11- and 12-year-olds in the borough of Tower Hamlets are overweight or obese – 11 per cent higher than the national average.