Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts

Saturday, February 7, 2009

TV 'link' to Alzheimer's

Tuesday, 6 March, 2001, 12:58 GMT

Too much TV could be linked to developing Alzheimer's say US researchers
Too much TV could be linked to developing Alzheimer's say US researchers

Watching too much television, and doing too little physical activity could be linked to Alzheimer's disease, according to US researchers.

A study looked at the hobbies of a group of people with Alzheimer's, compared to a healthy group.

Dr Robert Friedland said watching TV was the only recreational activity, out of those studied, that Alzheimer's sufferers were more likely to participate in.

But Dr Richard Harvey, director of research from the Alzheimer's Society said the US research did not prove there was any link.


Of all the activities we quantified ... Alzheimer's patients are in middle life less active in all of them - except for one, which is television

Dr Robert Friedland,
Alzheimer's researcher

Alzheimer's affects over 700,000 people in the UK. One in 20 between 70 and 80 and one in five over 80 have the condition.

The most common symptoms are memory, speech and perception problems.

'Less active'

Dr Friedland led the team of researchers from the Case Western Reserve University Hospital of Medicine and the University Hospitals of Cleveland.

The researchers looked at three kinds of activity - passive, intellectual and physical - covering all kinds of ways people spend their time outside work, from visiting friends to playing an instrument and sports.


There have been a lot of studies in the past that have shown an association between physical and mental activity and a reduced risk of Alzheimer's

Dr Richard Harvey,
Alzheimer's Society
He told BBC News Online: "The study showed that the Alzheimer's patients were consistently less active in younger life in all of these activities, except for TV".

Dr Friedland said: "The brain is an organ like any other organ which ages in regard to how its used. So learning is important for the brain - that's the purpose, like the heart pumps and the muscles constrict.

"The brain has been honed by evolutionary forces to be active, and learning is an important part of life.

"When you watch TV, you can be in a semi-conscious state where you really are not doing any learning."

The study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggested that people who were relatively inactive had a 250% increased risk of developing Alzheimer's.

It surveyed the carers of 193 Alzheimer's patients and 358 of their healthy friends, neighbours and acquaintances, and quizzed them about their different hobbies in middle-age.

It found those with Alzheimer's were less likely to have had intellectual hobbies, and were unlikely to have had as wide a range of interests as their healthy peers.

Dr Harvey told BBC News Online Alzheimer's Disease was a complex condition, and that its cause was unlikely to be as simple as watching TV.

He added that as the researchers had asked carers for the group with Alzheimer's about their habits rather than the patients themselves the data was likely to be inaccurate.

Carers were more likely to remember periods of inactivity, he said.

In contrast, he said the healthy people taking part could have been more likely to exaggerate the amount of physical activity they undertook.

Dr Harvey added that there was no direct cause identified for what was a complicated condition, but added: "There have been a lot of studies in the past that have shown an association between physical and mental activity and a reduced risk of Alzheimer's."

(original article)

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Too much television can make children ‘mentally ill’

Telegraph
February 2, 2009

Excessive exposure makes a child materialistic, which in turn affects their relationship with their parents and their health.

That is one of the conclusions of a new wide-ranging survey into British childhood, produced for the Children’s Society.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/telegraph/multimedia/archive/01251/childtv_1251151c.jpg

It says that children are part of a new form of consumerism, with under 16 year-olds spending £3 billion of their own money each year on clothes, snacks, music, video games and magazines.

The report claims that some advertisers “explicitly exploit the mechanism of peer pressure, while painting parents as buffoons” and that in its most extreme form, advertising persuades children that “you are what you own”.

In addition the “constant exposure” to celebrities through, TV soaps, dramas and chat shows is having a detrimental effect.

It says: “Children today know in intimate detail the lives of celebrities who are richer than they will ever be, and mostly better-looking. This exposure inevitably raises aspirations and reduces self-esteem.”

It adds the way celebrities are portrayed "automatically encourages the excessive pursuit of wealth and beauty."

This "media-driven consumerism" is having a negative effect on a child's wellbeing, the report says.

It highlights a study into the effect of consumerism on the psychological wellbeing of 10-13 year-olds.

That study found: "Other things being equal, the more a child is exposed to the media (television and Internet), the more materialistic she becomes, the worse she relates to her parents and the worse her mental health."

The Good Childhood inquiry, compiled by more than 35,000 contributors is independent of the Church of England affiliated society but has been endorsed by the Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams.

It takes an in-depth look at the changing face of childhood and family life in Britain, and the challenges facing youngsters today.

The report has found that only a quarter of children with mental health problems get any specialist help, and one in 10 five to 16-year-olds now have mental health issues, ranging from anxiety or depression to conduct disorders such as destructive behaviour.

It claims that the upward trend of violence in the media in general, is making children violent and causing tension within the family.

The report says: "We know from controlled studies that exposure to violence can breed violence.

"So it seems likely that the upward trend in media violence is helping to produce the upward trend in violent behaviour – and also the growth of psychological conflict in family relationships."

The report also notes that commercial pressures have led to the "premature sexualisation" of young people.

It notes that young people are having sex earlier because of "many forces", including "more privacy when both parents work, more contraception, commercial pressures toward premature sexualisation, and fundamental changes in attitude".

The report recommends that sex and relationships, and understanding of the media should be a compulsory part of the personal, social and health curriculum.

And it says advertising of unhealthy foods and alcohol should be banned before 9pm.

Read full article here

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