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Back To School Backpack Safety

August is here and that means it is time to get ready for school. Although many kids may not get excited about going back to school, most do get excited about going back to school shopping! One of the most important purchases a parent can make is the right backpack.
The US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) stated that in the year 2002, more than 7,000 emergency room visits were reported resulting from injuries related to book bags. You can be sure that there are many more injuries that never go reported. The CPSC also cites the statistic that backpack-related injuries are up 360 percent since 1996. Here are some keys to keeping your child safe from backpack injuries: (source: Backpack Safety America)

Step 1: Choose Right.

Choosing the right size backpack is the most important step to safe backpack use. The backpack should never hang lower than 4 inches below your child’s waistline. Make sure it has wide, cushioned, and adjustable shoulder straps to evenly distribute the contents’ weight to reduce pressure on the shoulders and neck. A lumbar waist belt on the backpack will help to keep it from swaying back and forth as they walk. Tip: Be involved and help your child pick out the correct size backpack.

Step 2: Pack Right.

The maximum weight of the loaded backpack should not exceed 15 % of your child’s body weight, so pack only what is needed. That means if their body weight is 80 pounds, they should carry 12 pounds or less in their backpack. Tip: If the backpack forces the wearer to hold their head forward to carry, it’s overloaded.
** To see how hard it is on your child’s back and spine, try loading the backpack to 15% your body weight and see for yourself how hard it is to carry!

Step 3: Lift Right.

Have your child face the backpack and bend at the knees. While using both hands they should lift with the legs and apply one shoulder strap and then the other. Tip: Don’t sling the backpack onto one shoulder.

Step 4: Wear Right.

Your child should ALWAYS use both shoulder straps – keep them snug, but not too tight. Teach your child that when they load the backpack to be sure to pack the heavier books/items towards the back so that they will lay closest to the child’s back. The lighter items should be the farthest from your child’s back. Tip: When the backpack has a waist strap – have them use it.
Wearing the correct size backpack and wearing it properly should be a serious concern for parents. Most problems adults have with their back, neck, and spines originate from childhood injuries that are left uncorrected. If your child uses a rolling book bag the same principles still apply. Too much weight, incorrect size, or improper loading can still cause injuries to the neck, shoulders, and back as they pull the bag behind them.

When in doubt, consult with your health professional so they can help you. Make sure to
watch out for the signs of a problem by looking for — pain, red marks from straps, poor
posture (head held forward) — indicating a backpack that fits poorly or is overloaded.
Picking out the proper backpack and making sure your child knows how to load and wear
it will send them off to school the healthy way!

Sources:
1. US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC); www.cpsc.gov
2. Backpack Safety America; www.backpacksafe.com
3. Richard Paul Duck Sense Programs; www.richardpaul.com; Backpack Safety – Articles
4. Chiropractic Research; Backpack Safety is Back-to-School Issue; www.chiropracticresearch.org

 

History of Chiropractic

Did you know that chiropractic dates back to the time of Hippocrates? He believed that if the spine was misaligned, it greatly contributed to the health of an individual.

The modern day school of chiropractic dates back to 1895, when Dr. Daniel Palmer adjusted a man that had lost his hearing 17 years prior. The story goes that prior to losing his hearing the man had heard something pop in his back. Upon the adjustment of the man’s misaligned vertebrae his hearing greatly improved.

While the medical community criticized this new technique for healing the body, the people who followed in these footsteps found an amazing new way of dealing with illness and disease. Dr. Palmer’s theories are still discussed in the chiropractic industry today. Without this man’s input into medicine in a time where he was greatly discredited, the millions of people today who enjoy the life changing benefits may never have had this opportunity. There is still a school named after Dr. Daniel Palmer as well as over 20 schools and thousands of chiropractic students across the country.

It’s a fact!

In the Middle Ages the length from the tip of the middle finger to the elbow was called an ell.

The muscle that lets your eye blink is the fastest muscle in your body. It allows you to blink 5 times a second.

On average, you blink 15 000 times a day. Women blink twice as much as men.

A typical athlete’s heart churns out 25 to 30 litres (up to 8 gallons) of blood per minute.

We have four basic tastes plus umami. The salt and sweet taste buds are at the tip of the tongue, bitter at the base, and sour along the sides; umami is a mixture of tastes sensed along the center of the tongue.

Not all our taste buds are on our tongue; about 10% are on the palette and the cheeks.

On average a hiccup lasts 5 minutes.

Life = Risk

Turning Disappointment into Joy

Apples Top The “Most Pesticide-Contaminated” list

Apples are at the top of the list of produce most contaminated with pesticides in a report published today by the Environmental Working Group (EWG), a public health advocacy group.

Its seventh annual report analyzed government data on 53 fruits and vegetables, identifying which have the most and least pesticides after washing and peeling. For produce found to be highest in pesticides, the group recommends buying organic.

Apples moved up three spots from last year, replacing celery at the top of the most-contaminated list; 92% of apples contained two or more pesticides.

“We think what’s happening to apples is more pesticides and fungicides are being applied after the harvest so the fruit can have a longer shelf life,” says EWG analyst Sonya Lunder. “Pesticides might be in small amounts, but we don’t know what the subtle, long-term effects of many of these pesticides are yet.”

The worst offenders also include strawberries (No. 3) and imported grapes (No. 7). Onions top the “clean” list, found to be lowest in pesticides.

By choosing five servings of fruit and vegetables a day from the clean list, most people can lower the volume of pesticides they consume daily by 92%, the report says.

The Dirty Dozen:

1. Apples

2. Celery

3. Strawberries

4. Peaches

5. Spinach

6. Nectarines (imported)

7. Grapes (imported)

8. Sweet bell peppers

9. Potatoes

10. Blueberries

11. Lettuce

12. Kale/collard greens

“Consumers don’t want pesticides on their foods,” says EWG president Ken Cook. “We eat plenty of apples in our house, but we buy organic when we can.”

Rankings reflect the amounts of chemicals present on food when it is eaten. Most samples were washed and peeled before testing. Washing with a “produce wash” is unlikely to help remove pesticides because they’re taken up by the entire plant and reside on more than just the skin, the report says.

For shoppers who cannot afford organic food, which often is more expensive, Cook says the lists offer alternatives. Can’t find organic apples? Buy pineapples, the top fruit on the clean list, or avocados or mangoes.

Fewer than 10% of pineapple, mango and avocado samples showed pesticides. For vegetables, asparagus, corn and onions had no detectable residue on 90% or more of samples.

The Clean Fifteen:

1. Onions

2. Corn

3. Pineapples

4. Avocado

5. Asparagus

6. Sweet peas

7. Mangoes

8. Eggplant

9. Cantaloupe (domestic)

10. Kiwi

11. Cabbage

12. Watermelon

13. Sweet potatoes

14. Grapefruit

15. Mushrooms

Pesticides are known to be toxic to the nervous system, cause cancer, disrupt hormones and cause brain damage in children. Pregnant women are advised to avoid foods containing pesticides.

A study by Harvard School of Public Health found children exposed to pesticides had a higher risk of developing attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

Lunder says pesticides were measured in six different ways to calculate overall scores:

-Percentage of samples tested with detectable pesticides.

-Percentage of samples with two or more pesticides.

-Average number of pesticides found on a single sample.

-Average amount (level in parts per million) of all pesticides found.

-Maximum number of pesticides found on a single sample.

-Total number of pesticides found on the commodity.

Eating five servings of fruits and vegetables from the “dirty dozen” list would mean you’d get an average of 14 different pesticides. By choosing five from the clean list, you’d consumer fewer than two pesticides.

“With the increased emphasis on eating more fruits and vegetables, we need to be vigilant about the food we’re producing and serving,” Lunder says.

(article by by Janice Lloyd – Jun. 13, 2011 USA TODAY – courtesy of www.AZCentral.com)

It’s True!

* The average person falls asleep in 7 minutes.

* Only humans sleep on their backs.

* Your stomach has to produce a new layer of mucus every 2 weeks, otherwise it would digest itself.

* Americans eat an average of 18 acres of pizza a day.

* The human eye blinks an average of 4,200,000 times a year.

* The average person has approximately 1,460 dreams a year.

* 52% of Americans drink coffee.

* The U.S. ranks 29th in overall life expectancy, with an average life expectancy of 78 years.

* Every time you lick a stamp, you consume 1/10 of a calorie.

* A humans eyes are always the same size since birth, but our nose and ears never stop growing.

* Apples, not caffeine, are better at waking you up in the morning.

* The average person has approximately 100,000 hairs on his/her head, and each hair grows an average of 5-6 inches a year.