| R 261 |
| 2017 -- S 0881 Enacted 05/23/2017 |
| S E N A T E R E S O L U T I O N |
| STRONGLY URGING ALL SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS, TEACHERS, PARENTS AND STUDENTS BE EDUCATED ABOUT THE POTENTIAL HEALTH IMPACT OF HEAVY BACKPACKS AND TAKE PROACTIVE MEASURES TO AVOID INJURY |
| Introduced By: Senators Gallo, Conley, and Ciccone |
| Date Introduced: May 11, 2017 |
| WHEREAS, Overloaded school backpacks are causing an increasing problem of back |
| pain and spinal strain for students across the nation; and |
| WHEREAS, Because spinal ligaments and muscles are not fully developed until after age |
| sixteen, overweight backpacks are a source of repeated low-level stress that may result in chronic |
| neck, shoulder or back pain in children; and |
| WHEREAS, According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, more than |
| 7,000 emergency room visits each year are due to backpack-related injuries. In 2010 alone, |
| physicians' offices, clinics, and hospital emergency rooms treated nearly 28,000 strains, sprains, |
| dislocations, and fractures from backpacks; and |
| WHEREAS, Studies have shown heavy loads carried on the back have the potential to |
| damage the soft tissues of the shoulder, causing microstructural damage to the nerves and damage |
| to internal organs; and |
| WHEREAS, Studies have shown an increase in curvatures of the spine and compressed |
| intervertebral height when backpacks exceed ten percent of a child's body weight; and |
| WHEREAS, The Global Burden of Disease Study of 2010 showed back pain as the |
| number one cause of disability worldwide and musculoskeletal disorders as the second cause; and |
| WHEREAS, Children's textbooks are much heavier now than many years ago, and in |
| addition to textbooks, students often carry computers, cell phones, water bottles, running shoes, |
| band instruments, and other equipment considered essential to have readily available; and |
| WHEREAS, More than ninety percent of students carry backpacks, which in studies have |
| been found to weigh as much as twenty-five percent of the child's body weight; and |
| WHEREAS, Backpacks are often not worn correctly — often slung over one shoulder or |
| allowed to hang significantly below the waistline, increasing the weight on the shoulders and |
| making the child lean forward when walking or stoop forward when standing to compensate for |
| the weight; now, therefore be it |
| RESOLVED, That this Senate of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations |
| hereby strongly urges that all school administrators, teachers, parents, and students be educated |
| about the potential health impact of heavy backpacks and take proactive measures to avoid injury; |
| and be it further |
| RESOLVED, That this Senate hereby recommends that Doctors of Chiropractic be |
| permitted to conduct mandatory interval scoliosis examinations on children; and be it further |
| RESOLVED, That this Senate hereby recommends that schools work with their |
| PTA/PTO to assess the extent to which students use overweight backpacks and to promote |
| innovative homework strategies, lessening the need to take all school materials and books back |
| and forth each day. In addition, schools should consider the following points when developing |
| their backpack education talking points: |
| ( Backpacks should weigh no more than a maximum of ten percent of a child's body |
| weight; |
| ( Encourage ergonomic backpacks with individualized compartments to efficiently |
| hold books and equipment; |
| ( Encourage children to wear both shoulder straps and not sling the backpack over one |
| shoulder; |
| ( Encourage wide, padded adjustable straps to fit a child's body; |
| ( Encourage the heaviest books be left at school and handouts or workbooks be used |
| for homework assignments; |
| ( Schools should consider moving toward e-textbooks as federal and state funding |
| becomes available; and |
| ( Schools should consider integrated education about backpacks by using a hanging |
| scale in the classroom, allowing students to weigh their backpack and enter the results into a |
| graph that would track the weights, and then look at the data to determine what can be done to |
| lighten loads; and be it further |
| RESOLVED, That the Secretary of State be and hereby is authorized and directed to |
| transmit duly certified copies of this resolution to the Commissioner of Elementary and |
| Secondary Education, the President of the Rhode Island Association of School Committees, |
| President of the Rhode Island PTA, President of the Rhode Island Association of Administrators, |
| the President of the National Education Association Rhode Island, and the President of Rhode |
| Island Chapter of the Federation of Teachers and Healthcare Professionals. |
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| LC002677 |
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