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Thursday, January 21, 2010

 

Video Games Blamed for Return of Rickets.


There are a lot of things I would very much like to blame video games for.


I would like to blame them for making millions of people believe
they really are great football coaches. I would like to blame them for
turning millions of people into courgettes. And I would like to blame
them for making far too many people believe that it really isn't hard
out here for a pimp.


However, it had never crossed my mind that they could be blamed for
the return of a disease that many of you might associate with Oliver
Twist.


No, not the plague of painfully staged musical productions in regional theaters. Rickets.


The main cause of rickets is a lack of vitamin D. Children in
developing countries can suffer greatly from it. It leads to a
softening of their bones that can result in physical deformity.
Yet, according to the Times of Oliver Twist's London, scientists are seeing a worrying return of rickets in UK children.


Professor Simon Pearce and consultant pediatrician Timothy Cheetham, wrote a paper in the British Medical Journal in which they suggested that rickets is becoming "disturbingly common" in the UK.




This nice man causes rickets? Surely not.


(Credit:

CC Marcos Kontze/Flickr
)


"Kids tend to stay indoors more these days and play on their
computers instead of enjoying the fresh air. This means their vitamin D
levels are worse than in previous years," Professor Pearce told the
Times.


In olden times, they used to give kids cod liver oil to ensure that
vitamin D levels were maintained. However, this practice smacks of
Queen Victoria rather than Lady Gaga.
So these scientists are recommending that everyday foods such as milk
should be supplemented with vitamin D.


It could be that too many parents have already given up on the hope
of being able to get their kids out of the house and into sunlight. And
I know there is precious little sunlight in the U.K. anyway.


It seems fairly evident that kids listen very little to their
parents these days anyway. So perhaps we should take the issue straight
to the kids. Perhaps we could get them to care about vitamin D and nag
their parents about it.


How about we talk the makers of Grand Theft Auto, World of Warcraft,
and the rest into making versions in which characters with vitamin D
deficiency are always, in one way or another, losers?


You know, they come last in races, never win the Superbowl and
never, ever get to machete some bad dude's head into several even
pieces. That might get the kids thinking, mightn't it?




Chris Matyszczyk is an award-winning creative director who advises
major corporations on content creation and marketing. He brings an
irreverent, sarcastic, and sometimes ironic voice to the tech world. He
is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.

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