May II, 2011 ^Jortlanh (Dbserurr Page 7 Gym Goes Healthy Exercise bikes generate electricity (AP) - Reddening, a rivulet of sweat running across her cheek, Amy McCullough hunched overthe stationary bike, pumped her legs like crazy and began producing se­ rious power — enough watts to run a flat-panel TV and a ceiling fan. She thrust her arms upward and exclaimed: "Oh, 180!" And, with that, her electrical out­ put drooped. The generator at­ tached to her exercise machine slowed, and the digital readout from the device on the handlebars fell below 100 watts. The transient burst was a per­ sonal best for the 43-year-old legal aid lawyer who works out five days a week at a storefront fitness center on Northeast Alberta Street where members on exercise machines fit­ ted with compact generators can bum calories and generate electric­ ity at the same time. Their workouts satisfy a modicum of the electrical draw at the 3-year-old Green Microgym. More important, Adam Boesel worksout on a stationary bike hooked up to a generator at the Green Microgym on Northeast Alberta Street. (AP photo) they satisfy a demand among its 200 members to be fit in a way that fits Portland's green-indie-local ethos. The 3,000-square-foot gym aims for a neighborhood trade. It features solar panels, recycled toilet paper, renewable-source flooring and lots For Your Health of reminders on the wall about turn­ ing off lights, fans and TVs. "I was really attracted to the idea that it w ould be green," said McCullough, who joined shortly after the gym opened in 2008. "I could go in and generate electricity. nancy rate of any developed na­ tion— overall, three in 10 women will become pregnant before age 20. by D r . J ames N. Nearly h alf (45.9 percent) of M artin J r . high school girls have had sex at least once, putting them at risk of an all-tim e low. pregnancy. A sexually active teen Teen pregnancy im pacts hun­ The bad news: that is not using contraception dreds of thousands of fam ilies in More than 2,000 teens still get has a 90 percent chance o f becom ­ the U.S. each year. The good pregnant each day. ing pregnant within a year. Em ­ news: Teen births have fallen to The US has the highest teen preg- phasizing the benefits o f waiting to have children is the focus o f National Teen Pregnancy Preven­ tion M onth in May. Teens may not readily recog­ nize the long-term costs o f early sex and parenthood. One-third of teen pregnancies end in abortion. Weddings O f those who decide to carry a pregnancy to term , few teens Corporate Events ch o o se a d o p tio n — 90 p ercen t raise the child them selves. Onsite 5x7 Printing Adolescent moms are signifi­ cantly less likely to receive their high-school diploma than those who Online Proofs & Orders antonioharris.com wait to have children. They are more Preventing Teen Pregnancy 503-730-1156 How cool is that?" cut, bleeds green. It's regularly in It has occurred to many exercis­ top 10 lists for bicycle and mass ers during long stretches on ma­ tran sit co m m u tin g , rec y clin g , chines that it would be cool to turn composting, energy-efficient build­ sweat into watts. In recent years, a ings and so on. few tinkerers and entrepreneurs "When I was researching Port­ have brought the idea to market. land businesses, they all were talk­ So far they have but a teensy ing about sustainability — all the sliver. The two leading startups sell good ones," he said. equipment to retrofit existing bikes He's gotten a lot of publicity about and elliptical trainers, and each re­ the technology— helpful for a busi­ ports hooking up about 1,000 ma­ ness that opened on credit-card fi­ chines. An executive of one com­ nancing a few weeks before the pany estimates that American fit­ economy tanked. ness centers house 8 million to 10 But the machines, he said, are million machines that could gener­ "just the shiny wrapper on a pack­ ate power. age, which is energy efficiency," They don't, though. Like much in something gym members such as energy that's efficient or alterna­ Martha Jones take seriously. tive, from plug-in cars to compact "Whoops, I have to turn off the fluorescents, initial capital outlays lights," she said at the end of an are steep. Absent a subsidy, or a interview in the gym's basement quantifiable green marketing ratio­ studio, dashing back inside. nale, the returns on investment don't Prominent in the gym are signs come quickly, if at all. that explain how to use the indi­ Kurt Broadhag, a Los Angeles vidual, adjustable controls for lights consultant to health clubs and an and fans. A wall-mounted button advocate of greening them, says it connects to a remote device that appears the payback period for elec­ allows the cable boxes to be shut tricity-generating exercise equip­ down, not just put on standby and ment is about 15 years — two to using 29 watts when the flat-panel three times the machines' life span. TVs are not in use. "The only sense it makes is in Jones is an Intel engineer who educating people in taking care of likes seeing her workout quantified the environment," he said. in watts. But it's not primarily the When Adam Boesel opened the electricity that attracts her to the Green Microgym in Portland's artsy, Green Microgym. gentrifying Alberta district, he fig­ "It's just really supportive," she ured on a market among people al­ said. "If you have somebody who ready educated about the environ­ knows you, who knows your name, ment. they will keep you moving. I know The former teacher from Seattle for sure I will cheat right and left on looked at Portland, a city that, when my workout without that." likely to live in poverty, receive public assistance, and have long periods of welfare dependency. When compared to women who delay having children until their early 20s, teen m others are much more likely to rem ain unm arried and raise their children without a partner. Teen fathers are also less likely to finish high school and are more likely to have low er paying jobs than their peers who have children later. Children of teen parents are also affected. Pregnant teens often ex­ perience pregnancy complications due to the lack of prenatal care. Teen moms may not be getting the proper nutrition and may use alcohol, drugs, and other substances that are harm­ ful to a fetus. Nearly 10 percent of babies born to teen mothers are low • birth weight. Later in life, the daugh­ ters of teen mothers are at high risk of having children in their adoles­ cent years, and their sons have a higher chance of being incarcerated than the sons of older mothers. As parents and adults, we should continue to encourage behaviors that have contributed to the drop in teenage pregnancy rates. These include abstinence or the delaying the start of sexual activity and con­ sistent use of condoms and hor­ monal contraceptives among teens who are having sex. Studies have also shown that parents can be very influential in discouraging teens from early sex and pregnancy. Par­ ents who clearly convey their own values toward sex, relationships, contraception, and pregnancy can have a huge impact on how their teens respond to sexual situations. Find more inform ation on teen s e x u a lity and p re g n a n c y at www.thenationalcam pcllgn.org. Dr. James N. Martin Jr. is the new president of the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.