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This is why pushing your kids to engage in physical activities from an early age is a wise decision!

The study was published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

This is why pushing your kids to engage in physical activities from an early age is a wise decision! (Image for representational purposes only)

New Delhi: The view of children crowding the streets to play their favourite games has reduced to a mere vague memory.

In times when technology has taken over, kids are barely seen outdoors indulging in activities since video games, smartphones and the television are taking up their time.

This physical inactivity is giving rise to the young ones complaining of ailments that they shouldn't be suffering from at least till a certain age.

If you are a parent who encourages your little one to engage in physical activities from an early age, then you are definitely setting parenting goals, because a study has warned that level of physical activity may start tailing off as early as the age of seven, and not during adolescence, as is widely believed.

The study was published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

"The present study found that 100 percent of boys and girls fitted into longitudinal trajectories which were inconsistent with the orthodox view that physical activity begins to decline at adolescence, declines much more rapidly at adolescence and/or declines much more rapidly in adolescent girls than boys," the researchers explained.

"The study questions the concept of the adolescent girl as a priority for research and policy efforts in physical activity," they pointed out.

They tracked the physical activity levels of a representative sample of around 400 children over a period of eight years (2006-15).

The physical activity levels were measured when the children were 7, 9, 12 and 15, using a small lightweight portable monitor (Actigraph), worn for seven days at a time.

Overall, the total volume of physical activity fell from the age of seven onwards in both boys and girls during this time, with declines no steeper during adolescence than in earlier childhood.

The study found that in 61 percent of boys, moderate levels of physical activity gradually tailed off from the age of seven.

However in girls, moderate levels of physical activity that gradually tailed off from the age of seven were 62 percent.

"Future research and public health policy should focus on (A) preventing the decline in physical activity which begins in childhood, not adolescence, and (B) providing an improved understanding of the determinants of the different physical activity trajectories, including an understanding of the relative importance of biological and environmental influences," they emphasized.

(With ANI inputs)