Consumer Health, Seventh Edition
References for Chapter 14
Exercise Concepts, Products, and Services
- Exercising your options. Consumer Reports on Health 1:17, 19-20, 1989.
- Health clubs: The right choice for you? Consumer Reports 61:27-30, 1996.
- Lloyd GER, editor. Hippocratic Writings. New York, 1978, Penguin Books.
- Spunt G: When Nature Speaks: The Life of Forrest C Shaklee, Sr., New York, 1977, Frederick Fell Publishers. (Marketed by the Shaklee Corporation to its distributors.)
- Ullyot J. Exercise and coronary disease. Healthline 3(10):1-2, 1984.
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- Pate RR and others. Physical activity and public health. A recommendation from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American College of Sports Medicine. JAMA 273:402-407, 1995.
- NIH Consensus Development Panel on Physical Activity and Cardiovascular Health. Physical activity and cardiovascular health. JAMA 276:241-246, 1996.
- Physical Activity and Health: A Report of the Surgeon General. Washington, D.C., 1996, Superintendent of Documents.
- Fletcher GF and others. Statement on exercise: Benefits and recommendations for physical activity programs for all Americans. A statement for health professionals by the Committee on Exercise and Cardiac Rehabilitation of the Council on Clinical Cardiology, American Heart Association. Circulation 94:857-862, 1996.
- Fletcher GF and others. Exercise standards: A statement for healthcare professionals from the American Heart Association. Circulation 91:580-615, 1995.
- Kenney WL. ACSM Fitness Book, 2nd edition. Champaign, Ill., 1997, Human Kinetics Press.
- Blair SN. Living with Exercise. Dallas, 1991, American Health Publishing Co.
- Jones JJ and others. Managing sports-related overuse injuries. Patient Care 30:(7):55-71, 1996.
- Choosing a sports medicine physician. Penn State Sports Medicine Newsletter 3(12):1-2, 1995.
- Athletic trainers: First line of defense. Penn State Sports Medicine Newsletter 4(4):6-7, 1995.
- Workouts that work. Consumer Reports 64(2):31-39, 1999.
- Burroughs B. Allure of home exercise devices sparks big sales-and many injuries. The Wall Street Journal, p 33, April 18, 1985.
- Exercise bikes: Good workout, good value. Consumer Reports 61:18-21, 1996.
- Ski machines: How close to the real thing? Consumer Reports 59:587, 1994.
- Zeni AI and others. Energy expenditure with indoor exercise machines. JAMA 275:1424-1427, 1996.
- Wild rides . . . or tame, there are bikes that fill the bill. Consumer Reports 64(6):38-41, 1999.
- Head cases: We checked fit, venting, and adherence to a new safety standard. Consumer Reports 64(6):42-44, 1999.
- Health & fitness equipment buying guide. Consumers Digest 34(5):33-48, 1995.
- Wichmann S, Martin DR. Athletic shoes: Finding the right fit. The Physician and Sportsmedicine 21:204-211, 1993.
- Think before you run: Buy shoes that match how your feet hit the street. Consumer Reports 64:23-27, 1998.
- Hunger LY, Torgan C. The bra controversy: Are sports bras a necessity? Physician and Sports Medicine 10(11):75-76, 1982.
- Gauthier MM. Continuous passive motion: The no-exercise exercise. Physician and Sports Medicine 15(8):142-148, 1987.
- LeMarr JD and others. Cardiorespiratory responses to inversion. The Physician and Sportsmedicine 11(11):51-57, 1983.
- "A flat, sexy stomach in 5 minutes flat!" (Yeah, right!). Tufts University Diet & Nutrition Letter 14(6):6-7, 1996.
- Miller RW. EMS: Fraudulent flab remover. FDA Consumer 17(4):29-32, 1983.
- Health clubs: The right choice for you? Consumer Reports 61:27-30, 1996.
- Shinaberger CS and others. Young children who drown in hot tubs, spas, and whirlpools in California: A 26-year survey. American Journal of Public Health 80:613-614, 1990.
- Press E. The health hazards of saunas and spas and how to minimize them. American Journal of Public Health 81:1034-1037, 1991.
- News release: AAP recommends children and adolescents avoid weight lifting until physically mature. Elk Grove Village, Ill., Jan 14, 1990, American Academy of Pediatrics. [New policy statement, June 2001]
- Cook PC, Leit ME. Issues in the pediatric athlete. Orthopedic Clinics of North America 26:(3):453-464, 1995.
- Position of the American Dietetic Association: Nutrition for physical fitness and athletic performance for adults. Journal of the American Dietetic Association 87:933-939, 1987. [Update, 2000]
- Gredmagin MA and others. Exercise intensity does not affect body composition change in untrained, moderately overfat women. Journal of the American Dietetic Association 95:661-665, 1995.
- Modified from The diet/exercise link: Separating fact from fiction. Tufts University Diet Nutrition Letter 6(12):3-5, 1989.
- Buskirk ER. Exercise. In Ziegler EE, Filer LJ Jr, editors. Present Knowledge in Nutrition, ed 2. Washington, D.C., 1996, ILSI Press.
- How much protein do athletes really need? Tufts University Diet & Nutrition Letter 5(8):1, 1987.
- Energy Bars: Are these fast fuelers for you? The Physician and Sportsmedicine 23(9):7-8, 1995.
- American College of Sports Medicine. Position stand on exercise and fluid replacement. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 28(1):i-vii, 1996. [Full text can be accessed by following the links to ACSM position stands.]
- Does Gatorade beat water? Consumer Reports on Health 3:63, 1991.
- Yesalis CE and others. Anabolic-androgenic steroid use in the United States. JAMA 270:1217-1221, 1993.
- Mishra R: On the teen scene: Steroids and sports. FDA Consumer 25(7):25-27, 1991.
- American Medical Association Council on Scientific Affairs. Medical and nonmedical uses of anabolic-androgenic steroids. JAMA 264:2923-2927, 1990.
- Leary WE. Users of steroids risk addiction, two researchers at Yale report. New York Times, Dec 8, 1989.
- Study shows addiction with anabolic steroids. FDA Consumer 25(10):6-7, 1991.
- Su T-P and others. Neuropsychiatric effects of anabolic steroids in male normal volunteers. JAMA 269:2760-2764, 1993.
- Teenagers blasé about steroid use. FDA Consumer 24(10):2, 1990.
- Barrett S, Herbert V. The Vitamin Pushers: How the "Health Food" Industry Is Selling America a Bill of Goods. Amherst, N.Y., 1994, Prometheus Books.
- Philan RM and others. Survey of advertising for nutritional supplements in health and bodybuilding magazines. JAMA 268:1008-1011, 1992.
- Barron RL, Vanscoy GJ. Natural products and the athlete: Facts and folklore. Annals of Pharmacotherapy 27:607-615, 1993.
- von Nostitz G and others. Magic muscle pills!! Health and fitness quackery in nutrition supplements. New York, 1992, New York City Department of Consumer Affairs.
- Lightsey DM, Attaway JR. Deceptive tactics used in marketing purported ergogenic aids. National Strength and Conditioning Association Journal 14(2):26-32, 1991.
- Lulinski B. Creatine supplementation. Quackwatch Web site, Sept 17, 1999.
- Williams MH. The Ergogenics Edge. Champaign, Ill., 1998, Human Kinetics.
This page was posted on December 21, 2001.