New York Post

UPAND RUNNING

The fitness-tracker craze has kids racing to a new obsession

- By DOREE LEWAK

W HEN 6-yearold Addison jumps out of bed, the Long Island fitness buff clips her 3DTriFit Pedometer to her pink onesie. Then she runs around the house to rack up steps.

“There are days where she’s worn it all day and had 12,000 steps,” says her mom, Deena, an elementary school teacher who withheld their last name for privacy reasons. Deena, a runner who wears a Garmin fitness watch, says Addison “just wants to beat me. I can see how that can get out of hand. But if my child has to be obsessed with something, I’d rather she be obsessed with how many steps she’s taking than [with] a video game.” (Addison’s four-year-old brother also wears one.)

Just like their parents, kids have become consumed by the fitness-tracker craze. That’s good news given that children who are glued to their screens often can see their weight rise and their grades drop. But is trading one obsession for another actually good for their health?

While there are no stats on kids who wear fitness trackers — a 2015 report from research firm Forrester cites only that 20 percent of Americans use some sort of fitness wearable — anecdotal evidence shows that kids as young as toddlers are counting steps and comparing numbers.

For many, it’s a lesser-of-two-evils trade-off.

“Kids become addicted to monitoring their step counts, [but] if that translates into moving more to stay ahead of their friends, that’s a win,” says Upper East Side-based sports medicine doctor Jordan Metzl.

But it’s unclear if the trackers have any lasting benefits — and some worry that they may actually contribute to unhealthy behaviors down the line.

Alexis Conason, a clinical psychologi­st in Midtown, notes that “kids can become compulsive about a device like the Fitbit.” She’s especially concerned with trackers

that count calories, and the effects that might have on children’s eating habits.

“We want to help children learn to care for their bodies through pleasurabl­e physical activity and eating guided by internal signs of hunger and fullness,” says Conason. “I think that devices like the Fitbit take us away from those goals.”

Mom Ella Leitner is equally concerned. When her 9-year-old daughter came back from summer camp excited about her friends’ trackers, Leitner thought it would be a good way to “get her off devices, keep her outdoors and active.” But her daughter, she says, quickly became compulsive.

“It’s another piece of technology,” says Leitner, a 44-year-old Lower East Side resident who put the kibosh on the new addiction. “[It’s not good for a] healthy almost-10-year-old who is small for her age and thin to begin with.”

A Fitbit spokespers­on stresses that its devices are “not directed at persons under the age of 13.” But the Fitbit Zip, as well as several other brands’ wearables, offer colorful choices frequently touted as kidfriendl­y online. LeapFrog has one specifical­ly for kids: The LeapBand, designed to get them moving with different challenges and offering them informatio­n about nutrition.

Whether or not the obsession is healthy, it’s clear it often starts at home.

“Ever since my mom got one, I wanted one. It looked like she was having fun competing with other people,” says 8-year-old Chelsea resident Leah Hodorov. Her mother, Marina Levin, 40, a health-care analytics worker, gifted Leah and each of her two siblings — Rachel, 11, and Marc, 13 — with a Fitbit Charge 2.

“Anything that can be measured, they want to do better than the other one — and now it’s how many steps they get,” says Levin.

“If I’m at 9,800 steps, I’ll jump around the apartment to get to 10,000,” says eighthgrad­er Marc, referencin­g Fitbit’s 10,000-step base-line goal for its adult users, which is roughly five miles.

When he accidental­ly leaves it at home, Marc, who can crack 20,000 steps in a day, says, “It really sucks because you’re 10,000 steps behind everybody.”

Some teachers are wary about fitness trackers in school — including Deena, who says some of her fifthgrade students are fixated on quantifyin­g their workouts. “They are so competitiv­e with each other,” she laments.

Shoshana, a kindergart­en teacher on the Upper East Side who declined to give her last name for privacy reasons, says she’s unhappy with the devices’ growing popularity.

“One kid said he’s getting one, and he already has a hard time paying attention. I can picture it being a huge distractio­n,” Shoshana says. “Plus, [it’s not the] right kind of competitio­n. They just want to see the number change — not to be healthier.”

Jacob Sheldon, 11, from Montville, NJ, was an early adopter of the trend, having been the first in his thirdgrade class to get a Fitbit. While he loves challengin­g his friends to races at school, his mom, Lina, 42, a litigation paralegal, says it motivated her son to stay active after the family moved from the city to “the sedentary suburbs.”

But despite his dedication, the tracker isn’t his top tech obsession.

“My phone is the best,” says Jacob. “Fitbit [comes in] second.”

 ??  ?? Siblings Leah (from left), Rachel and Marc Hodorov try to outdo each other in everything — including the number of daily steps they hit on their Fitbit bands.
Siblings Leah (from left), Rachel and Marc Hodorov try to outdo each other in everything — including the number of daily steps they hit on their Fitbit bands.
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