By Louise Atkinson
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1st 4lb: Rachel Purvis, ten, is carrying 28 per cent of her body weight with all her school bags
For most parents, itâs an achievement to get the children to school in time with everything they need (homework, the signed consent forms, the right sports kit, musical instruments, the cake for the charity fundraiser).
But it seems we should also now be weighing their school bags.
The combined weight of everything they are having to carry to and from school is causing growing concern among back specialists.
Eighty per cent of children in the UK regularly carry bags that are up to 20 per cent of their body weight on their back, according to research from the charity BackCare.
Studies show that carrying any more than 10 per cent of your body weight can cause spinal damage.
Musculoskeletal experts are warning we are facing an epidemic of back problems in young adults when the long-term effects of this early damage starts to appear.
âWe are seeing increasing numbers of young adults coming for treatment in relation to back trouble and this can often be traced back to carrying heavy bags to school,â warns Dr Peter Skew, an Essex-based GP with special interest in musculoskeletal medicine.
Dr Skew, vice-president of BackCare, adds: âChildrenâs skeletons are still developing, and having a heavy bag slung over one shoulder can exert unnatural force on the spine, muscles and attachments.
âRather like exercising only one side of your body in the gym, you quickly get unilateral muscle-loading, which can cause the small muscles in the back to tighten and compress the spine.â
A 2007 British study showed that 13 to 50 per cent of 11-17 year olds have experienced back pain.
And itâs been shown that if you experience back pain as a child, you are four times more likely to have to endure back pain as an adult.
And if you thought driving them to school would avoid the problems, think again.
âPicking up and swinging a heavy backpack onto your shoulder multiple times a day is potentially more damaging to a growing body than having to walk a long distance with a static load,â says Dr Skew.
Itâs not just getting to and from school thatâs the problem, because most schools no longer provide lockers or desks to store books (children sit at tables), so children have no choice but to carry everything around with them all day.
Dr Skew says young people are made even more vulnerable to back problems by their increasing inactivity â" muscles donât develop properly if you spend your time playing computer games instead of running around. This is compounded by poor posture and one-size-fits-all furniture.
The weight of the bag is not the only factor to consider: the type of bag your child is carrying can contribute to pain and strain.
The ideal school bag, according to Lorna Taylor, a paediatric physiotherapist, i s a not-too-large backpack with wide, padded straps to spread the load, and a waist belt. Heaviest items should be closest to the spine, which is the centre of gravity, to reduce the strain.
âParents should help their child pack the bag, so it doesnât weigh more than 10 per cent of their body weight,â she says.
âStraps should be adjusted so the pack sits high on the back and close to the spine. A waist strap allows some of the weight to be taken on the pelvis.â
Well, thatâs the ideal, but children are using all manner of bags, as we found when we asked a selection of children about their daily burden.
One struggled to school with bags weighing 42 per cent of her body weight â" the equivalent of asking a 12âst man to carry a 5âst bag. We then asked Lorna Taylor to assess the potential damage...
Aged just 10, and Georginaâs at risk of sciatica

2st 4lb: Georgina Kent, ten, is carrying 42 per cent of her body weight
Georgina Kent, ten, from Abingdon, Oxon
School bags: Backpack, drawstring PE bag, swimming bag (plus large lever-arch file in her arms).
Total weight: 15.3kg (2st 4lb), which is 42 per cent of Georginaâs body weight.
Georginaâs mother Carlene says: âBecause Georgina is quite sporty, she attends lots of clubs such as hockey, netball and swimming (she often swims twice a day), and has to take in her sports kit four times a week.
âShe has one rucksack on her back, one on her front, and various other bags hanging off her.
'She frequently complains of pain in her right shoulder blade because she carries so much on that side.
'She does have a locker, but she spends far too long carrying the bags for my liking. I am a massage therapist and have to massage my two daughters every couple of weeks to try to ease the knots in their backs.â
Expertâs v erdict: âIt is quite incredible that a child would be expected to carry almost 50 per cent of their body weight!
âThe worst offender is the drawstring bag, which will cut into your flesh and swing as you carry it, exerting a harmful twisting force on the spine, putting Georgina at risk of possible sciatica and prolapsed discs in adulthood.
âIt is commendable that the school offers such a wide sporting curriculum, but all that education will be wasted if the child grows up crippled by back pain.â
Itâs hard to stand straight

1st 7lb: Noah Hammond, 11, is carrying 27 per cent of his body weight with all his school bags
Noah Hammond, 11, from Banbury, Oxon
School bags: Backpack, large sports bag.
Total weight: 9.4kg (1st 7lb), 27 per cent of Noahâs body weight.
Noahâs mother, Helen, says: âNoahâs biggest problem is the school policy of instant detention if you forget to have the correct book with you.
'To avoid that possibility (and because he canât always be bothered to unpack everything at night), he â" like many boys â" tends to take most of his books with him every day.
âHe shoves it all in a backpack which he wears on one or both shoulders. There are lockers at school, but heâs lost the key â" and, anyway, a lot of his kit has to come home with him.
âIâd love Noah to walk the half mile to the bus stop each day, but with that load it is too much to ask, so I drive him.â
Expertâs verdict: âCarrying anything that weighs mor e than 15 per cent of a chiIdâs weight will be causing spinal damage whatever bag you use.
'Itâs incredibly difficult to stand up straight with a load like that, and walking in a forward-leaning position with hunched shoulders puts pressure on the spine, shoulders and neck which will lead to muscle strain.
âNoah should seriously cut down on the number of books he takes to school, and I suggest the school re-thinks its detention policy. His backpack is worn too low, too.â
âToo coolâ to wear bag properly

1st 2lb: Billy Clarke, seven, is carrying 21 per cent of his weight
Billy Clarke, seven, from East Sussex
School bags: Backpack, sports bag.
Total weight: 7kg (1st 2lb), 21 per cent of Billyâs body weight.
Billyâs mum Nicola says: âIt was quite a shock when Billy moved up to Year 3. Previously he had only to take a book bag and tiny gym bag. Now he has a huge amount of sports kit, including football boots.
âAs well as his books, he has a lunch box and his collection of âgo-goâ toys and a bunch of novelty key rings â" both all the rage in his age group.
âBilly is going through a âcoolâ phase and refuses to wear his rucksack on both shoulders, but he does have a peg in his classroom to hang it up when he gets to school.â
Expertâs verdict: âBilly is likely to be right on the edge of a growth spurt, which is when children are at most risk of damage because rapid growth affects your balance. < br />
âCarrying weights like these, children are at risk of sudden acute injury in the form of a muscle or tendon strain.
'Being sporty and fit will help protect Billy, but he should be encouraged to carry his backpack on both shoulders. A waist strap would help, too.
A dangerous strain on her neck

1st 13lb: Florence Wood, 15, is carrying 20 per cent of her body weight
Florence Woods, 15, Oxon
School bags: Plastic carrier bag, shoulder bag, French horn.
Total weight: 12kg (1st 13lb), 20 per cent of Florenceâs body weight.
Florenceâs mother Louise says: âAt this age, itâs very important to be seen with the ârightâ bag and Florence wouldnât dream of using a backpack.
'But sheâs become very efficient at taking the least possible amount of books and kit to school, and is so embarrassed to be seen with her French horn, she drops it off in the music block as soon as she gets off the bus.
'She has to walk a quarter-mile to the bus stop every day, and carries the other bags all day at school.
Expertâs verdict: âIf Florence wonât use a backpack, she must get into the habit of alternating the hand she carries the musical instrument in.
'She should also carry a messenger-style bag across her chest (not a shoulder bag), and alternate which side she wears that too.Â
âA carrier bag is never a good idea. The thin handle puts pressure on the fingers, and itâs likely to need regular readjustment.â
Rachel's shoulders could get hunched
Rachel Purvis (pictured at the top), ten, from Chipping Norton, Oxon
School bags: Backpack, music bag, sports bag, lunchbox.
Total weight: 9kg (1st 4lb), 28 per cent of Rachelâs body weight.
Rachelâs mother, Karen, says: âWe live just 300 yards from the school, but I often walk with Rachel to help her carry everything.
'When her sister was at the same school, I thoroughly embarrassed them by buying a brightly-coloured wheelie bag to carry everything for them.
âRachel will often pile everything into her large sports bag and wear it across her chest â" but Iâd much rather it had wheels on the bottom so she could drag it along instead.â
Expertâs verdict: âA heavy bag carried on one shoulder is the worst scenario, as this can affect the natural curve of the spine, twisting it into a C shape, putting it under unnatural pressure.
âThe shoulder you typically use will become higher as you hunch it to keep the strap in place, so the muscles become shorter. Lactic acid (a by-product of overuse) can build up causing tenderness, and the muscles can become knotted if not allowed to stretch.
âWheelie bags are an excellent idea â" I wish they had a wider acceptance amongst children.â
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I can well imagine that children will suffer lateer on their lives through having to carry these large loads before their bodies are fully grown. I think the most heaviest of what they have to carry are their books, which when I was a youngster were kept at the schools and supplied by the schools. I can only think they are expected to do a whole range of homework every night so then having to carry a large amount of books. Could this not be minimized by only having one subject for homework each night. There are some children who through ill health cannot cope with homework, which in turn causes problems for their parents who are in turn not up to todays teachings. I was one such case and my poor Mother could not cope so she had to stop any homework. I could not have coped with the heavy loads that children have to carry today even as a youngster. I think also a trolley on wheels would be an aid for children and save then from suffering bad backs etc when they are older.
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My daughters were at secondary school in the 80's and we campaigned to get lockers so that they didn't have to carry everything around all day. There was no alternative to taking them to school by car as getting on the normal service bus with books, musical instrument, sports gear etc was impossible. People complain that today's school children are mollycoddled by being driven to school rather than treking the 3 miles we walked but we has desks and cloakrooms in which to leave things.
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Hardly 'typical school kids'. They chose 5 kids from private schools. Of course they would have music lessons and sports lessons and all the rest, but the majority of kids don't...at least until they get into their GCSE years and beyond.
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Why not do it the easy way? Have all school books condensed into Kindle books. Now that would be lighter to carry. Nobody thought of that one yet, here in the 21st. century?
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Maybe children shoud be encouraged to pack what they need for the day instead of packing everything for the week, a good lesson in getting organised?
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Nowadays I suffer occasional muscle spasms, meaning that my left leg locks up and I lie down, unable to move. When I was in secondary school, it changed in my year-9 to another name and style. The new headmistress brought in very clearly favoured the new pupils, who didn't wear the old school blazer like we did...she gave the lockers to them while we had to carry around our coursework and sports bags along with everything else. I wonder if it's a coincidence. I also have to work on my posture: my shoulders hunch forwards, like I used to when carrying everything.
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You ran a similar article a couple of months ago and it was very helpful as I could show it to my daughter who is weighed down by books. She won't listen to me as she says I am over protective (grrr!) but she does take notice of others. I will show her this and see if it sinks in!!
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