Centre for Nutrition, Prevention and Health Services, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment , Bilthoven , Netherlands.
Centre for Health and Society, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment , Bilthoven , Netherlands.
Eur J Sport Sci. 2019 Nov;19(10):1395-1403. doi: 10.1080/17461391.2019.1600587. Epub 2019 Apr 12.
Generational differences in health-related factors will affect forecasts of future disease patterns and health care needs. We studied whether participation in sports activity and being physically active are different between 10-year generations over a part of their life course. We used three different datasets on Dutch adults: a cohort study running for 20 years, the Doetinchem Cohort Study (DCS), multiple yearly databases (2001-2015) from the Netherlands health interview study (HIS), and a retrospective cohort study on life time sports careers, the Sports Participation Monitor (SPM). Based on a different questionnaire in each study, frequencies of weekly sport participation and being physically active according to recommended levels were determined by generation and sex. All data sets showed that self-reported sport participation has been increasing with every 10-year generation already for many decades. Especially for those generations born in the 1930s up to the 1960s, sport participation is higher compared to their predecessors. For instance at age 50, 43% of those born in the 1940s engaged in sports activities compared to 55% of those born in the 1950s (DCS data). Physical activity according to recommended levels showed no systematic differences by generation. In conclusion, favourable generation-specific trends in participation in sports activities are found: recent generations are doing better than the older generations. It is unclear whether this also reflects higher levels of physical activity or lower levels of inactivity. Future research may reveal whether these developments also hold for other countries, and whether these developments continue for the younger generations.
代际差异对健康相关因素的影响将影响对未来疾病模式和医疗保健需求的预测。我们研究了在其生命历程的一部分中,体育活动的参与和身体活动是否在 10 年一代之间存在差异。我们使用了荷兰成年人的三个不同数据集:一个进行了 20 年的队列研究,即多特海姆队列研究(DCS),来自荷兰健康访谈研究(HIS)的多个逐年数据库(2001-2015 年),以及关于终身运动生涯的回顾性队列研究,即运动参与监测(SPM)。基于每个研究中的不同问卷,根据世代和性别确定了每周体育参与和按建议水平进行身体活动的频率。所有数据集都表明,自我报告的体育参与率已经在过去几十年中随着每 10 年一代的增长而增加。特别是对于那些出生于 20 世纪 30 年代至 60 年代的代际群体,与他们的前辈相比,体育参与率更高。例如,在 50 岁时,出生于 20 世纪 40 年代的人中,有 43%参与了体育活动,而出生于 20 世纪 50 年代的人中,有 55%参与了体育活动(DCS 数据)。根据建议水平进行的身体活动没有表现出系统的世代差异。总之,在参与体育活动方面发现了有利的代际趋势:最近几代人的表现优于老一辈人。目前还不清楚这是否也反映了更高水平的身体活动或更低水平的不活动。未来的研究可能会揭示这些发展是否也适用于其他国家,以及这些发展是否会持续到年轻一代。