Seefeldt Vern, Malina Robert M, Clark Michael A
Institute for the Study of Youth Sports, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48823, USA.
Sports Med. 2002;32(3):143-68. doi: 10.2165/00007256-200232030-00001.
A large proportion of adults in Western cultures are physically inactive, despite several decades of warnings about the potentially negative health consequences of a sedentary lifestyle. Efforts to promote physical activity have focused on identifying its determinants and designing interventions that might effectively promote regular physical activity. The multitude of factors that induce adults to initiate and maintain programmes of physical activity have been divided into those that are invariable (age, gender, race, ethnicity) and those that are presumed to be modifiable (behavioural and personality characteristics, environmental circumstances and community settings). The lack of consistency in the design, analysis and reporting of interventions in the lives of inactive or sedentary individuals has produced equivocal results. However, several social and environmental factors have systematically emerged as determinants of physical activity in adults. In ethnic minorities, the removal of barriers such as unaffordable facilities and unavailable childcare, high crime rates, fear for personal safety and culturally inappropriate activities are of primary importance. Social support from family, peers, communities and healthcare providers has resulted in modest improvements across cultures, ages and genders in selected settings, but the definition of specific interventions and their outcomes deserve additional attention. Longitudinal studies indicate that components of physical fitness are relatively transitory, with low to modest correlations between physical activity and measures of physical fitness in childhood and adolescence and in adulthood. Attempts to explain the activity behaviour of adults by applying various theories in programmes of intervention have also produced mixed results. Successful interventions tailor programmes to individual needs, account for personal levels of fitness, allow for personal control of the activity and its outcomes, and provide for social support by family, peers and communities. The initiation and maintenance of regular physical activity in adults depends on a multitude of biological and sociocultural variables that demand attention across the lifespan.
尽管几十年来一直有人警告久坐不动的生活方式可能对健康产生负面影响,但西方文化中的很大一部分成年人身体活动不足。促进身体活动的努力集中在确定其决定因素,并设计可能有效促进定期身体活动的干预措施。促使成年人开始并维持身体活动计划的众多因素已被分为不变因素(年龄、性别、种族、民族)和假定可改变的因素(行为和个性特征、环境状况和社区环境)。针对不活动或久坐个体生活的干预措施在设计、分析和报告方面缺乏一致性,导致结果模棱两可。然而,一些社会和环境因素已系统性地成为成年人身体活动的决定因素。在少数民族中,消除诸如设施费用过高、托儿服务无法提供、犯罪率高、对个人安全的恐惧以及文化上不合适的活动等障碍至关重要。来自家庭、同龄人、社区和医疗保健提供者的社会支持在某些特定环境中,已在不同文化、年龄和性别群体中带来了适度改善,但具体干预措施及其结果的定义值得更多关注。纵向研究表明,身体素质的各个组成部分相对具有暂时性,在儿童期、青少年期和成年期,身体活动与身体素质指标之间的相关性较低至中等。通过在干预计划中应用各种理论来解释成年人的活动行为的尝试也产生了喜忧参半的结果。成功的干预措施会根据个人需求调整计划,考虑个人健康水平,允许个人控制活动及其结果,并提供来自家庭、同龄人及社区的社会支持。成年人定期身体活动的开始和维持取决于众多生物和社会文化变量,这些变量在整个生命周期都需要关注。