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Children & Weight Training - Should Kids Be Lifting Weights
More
children are entering the fitness movement each year due to the
increasing media coverage regarding the rising number of children
and adults who suffer from obesity. As a result many parents are
asking whether or not their children should be using weights.
To date there are differing opinions on the matter
but there is currently no researched evidence to suggest that using
weights properly will cause damage to the joints or growth plates
of a child. In fact there is evidence to suggest that children who
begin good health and fitness habits early in life will have a lower
risk of disease and illness as they reach adulthood.
The initial concern about children lifting weights
stems from a couple of issues. One was a result of a research study
done on children in concentration camps during WWI who were doing
heavy manual labor, receiving poor nutrition and little sleep. This
is the study to which people point when they claim that weights
will damage the growth plates and joints of children.
The issue with the growth plates is interesting because
these dont usually close until around 18 years of age on average
for either sex. Most trainers who believe that the growth plates
will be damaged also state that young people 16 and older can lift
weights. And since the plates arent closed until around 18
years old this argument doesnt hold water.
The criteria that should be used for children to use
weights is whether they are able to appropriately follow directions
and are involved in a sport that their performance will benefit
from the use of weights.
Think of it this way. As a child is 7-10 years old
they are probably doing push ups. At this age they can weigh between
60 and 100 pounds. While doing pushups they are placing a weight
of between 30 and 50 pounds on their shoulders. This is using weights.
When children are jumping they are placing weight stress on their
knees, ankles and hips. Doctors dont tell their young patients
not to play with their friends.
In the American College of Sports Medicine Certified
News December 2000 physicians agreed that weight lifting for young
children posed no risk for to their joints and growth plates when
the weights were used appropriately. The National Strength and Conditioning
Association also states that they believe there is no harm associated
with using weight with children.
The issue of using weights with children should instead
be an issue of maturity. When children start using weights at a
young age to improve their performance in their sport they sometimes
lose the whole fun aspect of the sports and sour on team performance
or performance sports at a young age.
Before adding a weight training aspect to the conditioning
of young athletes they should be evaluated by their physician to
be cleared for the extra work in their program. While weights are
not a problem for normally maturing joints and growth plates children
who have specific problems or issues should decrease the amount
of weight work they do or forego it entirely until the joints have
healed.
When training younger athletes the use of functional
sports activities rather than strength training specific muscles
improves the athletes performance while not becoming a mental
drain on the child. For instance, using old tires, using parachutes
in the gym or rope climbing all achieve the same results of working
a muscle against a weight resistance.
We must remember however, that children are not miniature
adults. Therefore, designing a weight program for children should
never be a scaled down version of a program designed for an adult.
Instead a certified professional trainer who is familiar with working
with children should design a program specific to the needs of the
child and the intended sport.
By
Kristy Lee Wilson
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