Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, University College London, London, WC1E 7HB, UK.
Sport and Health Science, University of Exeter, Devon, EX1 2LU, UK.
Sports Med. 2018 Nov;48(11):2623-2640. doi: 10.1007/s40279-018-0983-4.
Men and women joining the military undergo the same training, often in mixed-sex platoons. Given the inherent physiological and physical performance differences between men and women, it is reasonable to question whether sex differences exist in the adaptation to military training and, therefore, whether sex-specific training should be employed to optimise training adaptations.
To systematically review the literature evaluating changes in the physical performance of men and women following military training.
Six database sources were searched in addition to extensive secondary searching. Primary prospective intervention studies (all designs) evaluating physical training interventions in military populations, reporting pre- to post-training changes in physical fitness outcomes for both women and men, were included.
We screened 3966 unique records. Twenty-nine studies (n = 37 study reports) were included, most of which were conducted in the USA and evaluated initial training for military recruits. Positive changes were more consistently observed in aerobic fitness and muscle strength (whole body and upper body) outcomes than lower body strength, muscle power or muscle endurance outcomes, following physical training. Relative pre- to post-training changes for all outcome measures tended to be greater in women than men although few statistically significant sex by outcome/time interactions were observed.
Improvements in some, but not all, performance components were observed following a period of military training. Largely, these improvements were not significantly different between sexes. Further prospective research is needed to evaluate sex-specific differences in the response to physical training in controlled conditions to improve military physical training outcomes for both sexes.
男性和女性在加入军队时接受相同的训练,通常在男女混合的排中进行。鉴于男性和女性之间存在固有的生理和身体表现差异,因此有理由质疑是否存在适应军事训练的性别差异,以及是否应该采用专门针对性别的训练来优化训练适应。
系统地回顾评估男性和女性在接受军事训练后的身体表现变化的文献。
除了广泛的二次搜索外,还搜索了六个数据库来源。纳入了评估军事人群体能训练干预的前瞻性干预研究(所有设计),报告了女性和男性的体能结果在体能训练前后的变化。
我们筛选了 3966 条独特的记录。纳入了 29 项研究(n=37 项研究报告),其中大多数在美国进行,评估了军事新兵的初始训练。在接受体能训练后,有氧健身和肌肉力量(全身和上半身)的结果更一致地观察到积极的变化,而下肢力量、肌肉力量或肌肉耐力的结果则不然。尽管很少观察到统计学意义上的性别与结果/时间的交互作用,但所有结果测量的相对前后训练变化在女性中往往大于男性。
在一段时间的军事训练后,一些但不是所有的表现成分都有所改善。这些改善在很大程度上在性别之间没有显著差异。需要进一步的前瞻性研究,以在受控条件下评估身体训练对性别特异性反应的差异,以提高男女两性的军事身体训练结果。