Abstract

Data regarding the effects of backpack carriage on children’s body strains while walking are limited. This study measured the body posture, muscle activation, and subjective discomfort scores of 12 male schoolchildren (age: 12.3 (range 12.1–13.0) y, height: 151.3 (range 144.2–154.6) cm, weight: 46.6 (range 43.6–49.7) kg) carrying backpacks weighing 5%, 10%, and 15% of their respective body weights (BWs) and walking for 10 min on a treadmill. For each load, three positions along the spinal column (T7, T12, and L3) were examined. Participants carrying a backpack weighing 15% of BW exhibited higher head flexion, trunk flexion, and corresponding muscle activation, and a lower lumbosacral angle compared with those carrying loads of 5% and 10% of BW. The waist received the highest discomfort scores when the backpacks were carried at the L3 position. Conversely, the discomfort rating for the neck and shoulders where the highest when the backpack was at the T7 position; this high backpack position also caused more head flexion than the other two positions. For the musculoskeletal health of children, the findings suggest that carrying a school backpack weighing 15% of BW should be avoided, and carrying at the T12 position may be recommended for schoolboys.

Highlights

  • Most schoolchildren in developed countries carry backpacks

  • Muscle activation, and discomfort score of all participants are provided for each backpack-carrying combination as supporting information (S1 Dataset)

  • Trunk flexion and lumbosacral angle were affected by backpack weight, but not by backpack position (p < 0.001)

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Summary

Introduction

Most schoolchildren in developed countries carry backpacks. Previous studies have demonstrated that daily physical stresses associated with carrying backpacks cause significant forward lean of the head and trunk [1,2,3] and changes in spinal curvature [4,5]. Intermittent postural adaptations are assumed to result in pain and disabilities in schoolchildren [7,8,9]. In Australia, the average load carried by children was found to be 5.3 kg, or approximately 10% of their mean body weight (BW) [10]. Dockrell et al [12] surveyed 529 children in Ireland and found that the mean schoolbag weight was 12.6% of BW, and only 29.9% of children carried schoolbags that

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