While teens with normal weight parents tended to be more fit, having physically active parents didn't affect teens' level of fitness, finds new study.
While teens with normal weight parents tended to be more fit, having physically active parents didn't affect teens' level of fitness, finds new study. Cardiorespiratory fitness influences health in youth and adulthood, said lead study author Eliane Peterhans, a sports sciences researcher at the University of Konstanz in Germany.
"It is very important to understand how adolescents behave because then you have a chance to correct unhealthy behaviors," she added.
The study was part of a large German study and included 1,328 teens. Researchers used bicycles to assess participants' cardiorespiratory fitness and gathered information about their and their families' health behaviors.
Peterhans and her colleagues found that having two parents with normal weight positively predicted cardiorespiratory fitness in both boys and girls. Since body weight is related to nutrition, having normal weight parents may reflect an overall healthier family environment, the researchers suggested.
However, having parents who were physically active did not influence teen fitness, suggesting that teens may not regard their parents as role models for fitness.
Having a normal body weight and health behaviors such as going to the gym, engaging in leisure time physical activity, and riding a bike to school most strongly predicted cardiorespiratory fitness for both boys and girls, but this association was generally stronger for boys.
Advertisement
Overall, family health behaviors were less related to girls' cardiorespiratory fitness than boys' fitness.
Advertisement
The study appeared in the Journal of Adolescent Health.
Source-ANI