Vella Stewart A, Schranz Natasha K, Davern Melanie, Hardy Louise L, Hills Andrew P, Morgan Philip J, Plotnikoff Ronald C, Tomkinson Grant
Early Start Research Institute, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Wollongong, Australia.
Alliance for Research in Exercise, Nutrition and Activity (ARENA), School of Health Sciences, University of South Australia, Australia.
J Sci Med Sport. 2016 May;19(5):407-12. doi: 10.1016/j.jsams.2015.04.011. Epub 2015 Apr 30.
Youth participation in organised sport and physical activity is important for healthy development, growth and wellbeing. In 2014, Active Healthy Kids Australia released its inaugural Report Card on Physical Activity for Children and Young People, which synthesised the best available national- and state-level data for children and young people (<18 years). This paper provides a more detailed examination of the evidence informing the grade for Organised Sport from the 2014 Report Card, compares Australia's Organised Sport grade with other countries, identifies future directions for research and surveillance, and explores possible beneficial strategies. The Report Card highlighted that between 64% and 85% of Australians aged 5-17 years participate in organised sports, a rate higher than alternate forms of physical activity such as active transportation, active play and school based physical activity. This finding reflects Australia's position as one of the global leaders for participating in organised sport. Future research and surveillance methodologies however, need to incorporate standardised metrics that aim to capture more detailed data regarding organised sport participation. Facilitating access for all children and preventing dropout from organised sports are important initiatives to improve current levels of sport participation. However, given that 80% of Australians aged 5-17 years are not sufficiently physically active to achieve the daily recommendation, participation in sport alone is not enough to ensure that children can accrue the health benefits associated with being physically active. As such, there is a pressing need to develop strategies that engage children in other forms of physical activity such as active transportation and active play.
青少年参与有组织的体育活动和身体锻炼对于其健康发展、成长和幸福至关重要。2014年,澳大利亚健康活跃儿童组织发布了首份关于儿童和青少年身体活动的成绩单,该成绩单综合了可获取的关于儿童和青少年(18岁以下)的最佳国家级和州级数据。本文对2014年成绩单中为“有组织的体育活动”这一评分提供依据的证据进行了更详细的审视,将澳大利亚在有组织的体育活动方面的评分与其他国家进行了比较,确定了未来研究和监测的方向,并探讨了可能有益的策略。成绩单强调,64%至85%的5至17岁澳大利亚人参与有组织的体育活动,这一比例高于诸如积极出行、主动玩耍和校内体育活动等其他形式的身体活动。这一发现反映出澳大利亚在参与有组织的体育活动方面处于全球领先地位之一。然而,未来的研究和监测方法需要纳入标准化指标,旨在获取关于有组织的体育活动参与情况的更详细数据。为所有儿童提供参与机会并防止他们退出有组织的体育活动是提高当前体育活动参与水平的重要举措。然而,鉴于80%的5至17岁澳大利亚人身体活动不足,无法达到每日建议量,仅参与体育活动不足以确保儿童能够获得与身体活动相关的健康益处。因此,迫切需要制定策略,让儿童参与其他形式的身体活动,如积极出行和主动玩耍。