therapyTimes.com is a daily source for Music, Nursing, Nutrition, Occupational, Pediatric, Physical, Respiratory and Speech Therapy Professionals containing editorials, articles and radiology jobs.

Music Therapy, Nursing, Nutrition Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Pediatric Therapy, Physical Therapy, Respiratory Therapy, Speech Therapy




search site:    
 


home | login | register





  Indiana State University
www.indstate.edu




:: AOTA Board of Directors Approves Fiscal Year 2010 Budget

:: How Language Impairments Affect Child’s Story Telling

:: Hospital promotes infant massages Power of touch believed to aid child development

:: Aerobic Exercise Boosts Older Bodies and Minds

:: Real Hope in a Virtual World

:: Children’s Early Skills Predict Later School Success

:: Criteria Developed to Detect Bone Mass Deficiencies in Children

:: Tips to ‘Lighten the Load’ from Kessler Institute for Rehabilitation

:: Physical Activity’s Impact on Weight-Bearing Knee Joints

:: Increase Pre-Op Exercise, Decrease Post-Op Rehab

:: Beach Runners Beware: Summer Workouts Lead to Increased Orthopedic Injuries

:: Asthmatic Teens Welcome Web-based Management

:: Older Driver Initiative

:: Spinal Tapped

:: It’s Not All in Your Head

:: Beyond the Break

:: Classroom of the Future to Reshape Young Waistlines

:: Low Birth Weight, High Risk for Hyperactivity

:: More Than 30 Percent of Common Children's Vision Disorders Missed

:: One-Third of U.S. Children Regularly Take Dietary Supplements

:: Head Injury Greater in High School Football

:: Life After Spinal Cord Injury

:: Minimizing Risk

:: Baby Boomers Getting More Hip Injuries

:: Treatment Guidelines for Hand, Wrist, Forearm Injuries

:: Brain or Spinal Injury Linked to Increased Bankruptcy Rates

:: An Eye for an Eye Movement

:: The Sound Benefits of Music

:: Immigrant Children Sluggishly Scale Language Barrier

:: Developing a New Class of Patient

:: Child Turns the Page on His Own Reading Difficulties

:: Backpack Redefines Power Walking

:: Planting The Seeds For Rehabilitation

:: Getting to the Root of Rett

:: Some Children are Born with Temporary Deafness

:: Virtual Reality Teletherapy Improves Hand Function

:: Work Smarter, Not Harder

:: Getting to the Root of Stuttering

:: Bringing Back Soldiers

:: Federal Resources for Children Face Challenges

:: Those Blinded by Brain Injury May Still ‘See’ New Study Shows

:: No Pain, No Game

:: A Resounding Goal

:: Splinting Choices Today

:: Use Your Head Gear

:: Wii™ Video Games Helps Stroke Patients Improve Motor Function

:: Seniors Benefit From Strength Training

:: RA Patients Want Pain-Free Shopping Days at Christmas

:: Revolutionary Workbook Teaches Writing With Non-Dominant Hand

:: Surgical Technique Helps to Reanimate Paralyzed Faces

:: Researchers study bike riding effects on autism patients

:: Ohio Pain Clinic Creates ‘Virtual Clinic’

:: Is Lack of Sleep Making You Fat?

:: An Out-of-This-World Therapy Experience

:: Toying with New Connections

:: Older Adults Gain Strength in Community Workout Programs

:: Recovery From Brain Injuries Can Last a Lifetime

:: Craft Kit Therapy Benefits Hospitalized Veterans

:: Exercise Plays Large Role in Knee Replacement Recovery

:: At the Crossroads of Therapy Intelligence

:: Natural Defense Mechanism for Alzheimer's

:: On the Money

:: Spiritual Healing

:: Over-reacting Can Make Stuttering Worse

:: Building Baby Brain Connections

:: Injuries from Technology More Common Than People Realize

:: Relief for MS Patients

:: Addressing Stigma of Pediatric Mental Health Conditions

:: Pumping Iron In-House

:: A Breath of Life

:: Pediatric Ritalin Use May Affect Developing Brain

:: Stroke May Be Striking at a Younger Age

:: Exercise Is Healthy Option for Kids with Developmental Disabilities

:: Special Baylor Rehab Program Awarded for Innovation

:: Purses, Briefcases, and Luggage Can Leave You in Pain at the End of the Day

:: Nintendo Wii Assists United Cerebral Palsy Therapy Program

:: Kennedy Krieger Institute Opens New State-of-the-Art Outpatient Center in Baltimore

:: New Study Reveals Handwriting is a Problem for Children with Autism

:: Program Uses Music to Enhance Early Development

:: Is Your Child at Risk of Little League Elbow?

:: Early Bird Gets the Word

:: Gesturing Helps Grade-Schoolers Solve Math Problems

:: Setting It Straight

:: Normalizing School-Based Therapy

:: Back in the Swim of Things

:: Breaking the Silence

:: Game Pain Away

:: Newborns: Can You Hear Me Now?

:: Crossing International Lines

:: Take a Load Off: Back-to-School Backpack Safety

:: Teens' Fruit, Veggie Intake Decreasing

:: Exercise Benefits Reach into Old Age

:: Adding a New Dimension to Learning

:: Reading Between the Language Acquisition Lines

:: Progress Made in Leaps and Bounds

:: Monkeys Use ‘Baby Talk’ to Interact with Infants

:: Hand Use for Wounded Soldiers Improved by Bioengineering

:: A New Twist to Speech Therapy

:: Findings Could Lead to New Therapy for Spinal Cord Injury

:: Study tackles aging issues of adults with developmental disabilities

:: Tips to Keep Top of Mind

:: Don't Let Horse Play Throw You

:: Does Core Strength Help in Sports?

:: Listen Up

:: Occupational Therapy Gets People with Osteoarthritis Moving

:: Eating at Buffets, Plus Not Exercising, Equals Obesity in Rural America

:: Music Can Make or Break Workout

:: Block-Play May Improve Toddler Language Development

:: Walk Your Way to Better Health

:: Exercise May Help Improve Memory Problems

:: Activity Strategy Training

:: ‘Back-Breaking’ Work Beliefs Contribute to Health Workers’ Pain

:: Pulmonary Expert Comments on Lung Transplants Study

:: Exercise Plan for Preschoolers Eyed to Thwart Childhood Obesity

:: Children at Play

:: Back in the Swing of Things

:: Lack of Exercise in Childhood May Lead to Heart Disease

:: A Lot to Swallow

:: Developing a New Class of Patient

:: Therapy Intervention Extends Lifespan and Quality of Life

:: When Babies Learn Language, the Eyes Have It

:: Amputee Survivor Reaches Out

:: Childhood Social Skills Linked to Learning Abilities

:: Culturally Speaking

:: Agony of the Feet

:: Children Take Pediatric Arthritis Advocacy to the Hill

:: Most Adults Don’t Realize Activity Lowers Colon Cancer Risk

:: Strike out Strokes Early

:: Low-intensity Exercise Reduces Fatigue Symptoms

:: Summer Camp Helps Kids Regain Abilities Lost To Stroke

:: Occupational Therapists Take Animal Therapies Beyond Special Equestrians

:: Occupational Therapy Keeps Angler Fishing

:: One Therapist, Under Law

:: Experts Cite Pediatric Pain, Palliative Care Shortcomings

:: Farm Therapy

:: Special Brain Wave Boost Slows Motion

:: Weighing in on Muscle Mass

:: Helping Children Get Chatty

:: Spatial Awareness Affected by Hands

:: Recovering with Four-Legged Friends Requires Less Pain Medication

Emergency Medical Record



::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - WI
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - WA
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - TX
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - NJ
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - PA
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - PA
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - TX
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - TN
::  Physical Therapist-Skilled | US - TN
::  Physical Therapists | US - NJ
::  Physical Therapy Jobs
By Onward Healthcare
  [more]

   
home :: departments :: tech trends

Toying Around
07.06.06

Article available online at: http://www.therapytimes.com/070606OT


Adding weight to toys may serve as a way to improve children’s fitness, according to research at Indiana State University (ISU).

Professor John Ozmun, PhD, and graduate student Lee Robbins conducted the study with 7- and 8-year-old children, who carried 3-pound weighted and unweighted cardboard blocks while wearing a portable metabolic unit that measured physiological characteristics.

“We conducted the research project to find out if you changed the weight of a toy, would there be an effect on certain fitness-related characteristics,” says Ozmun, acting associate dean of ISU’s College of Health and Human Performance, and physical education professor. “Our results showed that the extra weight in the blocks could be used to help improve children’s fitness.”

All of the factors studied – energy expenditure, heart rate, respiration and muscle activity – showed improvement with the weighted blocks, he says.

“What we found was that the children did burn more calories when they carried the weighted blocks,” Ozmun says. “Their respiration and heart rates were higher, as well.”

“Our study should be viewed as a spring board to further research,” says Robbins. “Our conclusions are based on measuring just a few children, and further research with young children is needed.”

Further research could include using these weighted toys with children who are overweight or obese, according to the researchers.

“We have this major obesity epidemic in our country, and we are seeing risk factors in the preschool-age population,” Ozmun says. “Although these weighted toys are not the only answer to this major health issue, they may serve as a small puzzle piece that could make a positive contribution.”

Children with disabilities or strength deficits also might benefit from further research with weighted toys, he says.

“There’s the possibility of using these weighted toys in a pediatric physical therapy or a pediatric occupational therapy clinic for a child who has a disability such as cerebral palsy or Down syndrome,” Ozmun says. “Children with these conditions tend to have muscular strength deficits. Weighted toys might serve as a tool that could help a physical therapist or an occupational therapist with their therapeutic approaches.”

Source: Indiana State University



  Have a comment on this article? Send it




AccuMed Technology Solutions at CSM 2010
Bill Cummins, MS, CCC-SLP, discusses the Cypress Therapy software from AccuMed Technology Solutions, which provides a library of documentation templates, including daily notes, weekly summaries, initial and monthly plans of progress, and discipline-specific evaluations, as well as Cypress Mobile software in which therapists enter treatment data as they work with patients, running on any handheld device using the Windows Mobile® operating system Cypress Therapy software integrates, manages, and displays information for therapists, managers, and business office staff.
[webcast archive]

 
Copyright © 2010, Valley Forge Publishing Group
2570 Boulevard of the Generals, Ste 220, Norristown, PA 19403
p. 800-983-7737 | f. 610-854-3780 | e. info@therapytimes.com
 
Web Award   APEX Award   ASBPE Award   ASHPE Award