Knockout effect of TV wrestling

Adolescents watching professional wrestling on television are more prone to violence, unsafe sex, and other risky behaviours, says a new study.

The study led by Robert H. DuRant, Ph.D of Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC, has found that as the frequency of watching wrestling increases, the rate of risky behaviours also goes up.

DuRant and colleagues surveyed 2,300 young people, aged 16 to 20, across the US where 22 per cent males and 14 per cent females said they had watched professional wrestling on television over the past two weeks. The survey found that respondents who had tried to hurt someone with a weapon watched 67 per cent more wrestling than those who had not tried to hurt anyone. Those who engaged in sex without birth control watched wrestling 42 per cent more frequently than those who used birth control.

And smokers watched wrestling 31 per cent more often than non-smokers. “Youth who watch wrestling are exposed to a barrage of images of severe violence without the expected negative consequences, the degrading of women, sexuality connected with violence, and extreme verbal intimidation and abuse between wrestlers and their female escorts and/or women wrestlers,” the researchers wrote.

“Reducing children’s and adolescents’ exposure to violence from electronic media sources should be an important component

of any violence-prevention strategy,” they added. The study is published in the February Southern Medical Journal, official journal of the Southern Medical Association. — ANI



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