Teenagers who see exercise as fun, social and good for their health are significantly fitter by late adolescence than those driven by competition, pressure or fear of judgment, new research led by ...
WASHINGTON -- Get your daughters off the couch: New research shows exercise during the teen years -- starting as young as age 12 -- can help protect girls from breast cancer when they're grown. Middle ...
There is a magical place where my teenage children are invariably pleasant, we all happily engage in healthy activities and no one is glued to a screen. I’ll let you in on the secret: this magical ...
New research examining recreational physical activity’s relationship with breast tissue composition, oxidative stress, and inflammation in adolescent girls revealed potential pathways for cancer risk ...
Exercise, not calcium, may have the strongest effect on growing bones in adolescent girls. In a decade-long study, researchers from the Penn State University College of Medicine in Hershey, USA, found ...
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NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Most U.S. teenagers are not as active as they should be, but a lack of exercise does not seem to account for rising rates of teen obesity, a new study finds. Using ...