Boston University School of Medicine, 72 E. Concord St. Boston, MA 02118.
Boston Medical Center, 1 Boston Medical Center Pl. Boston, MA 02118.
J Affect Disord. 2021 Feb 1;280(Pt B):24-29. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2020.11.076. Epub 2020 Nov 12.
The association between sports participation and mental health has not been studied in primary care samples of school-age children, nor in underrepresented minority children. We assessed the relationship between number of sports played and psychiatric symptoms in children ages 6-11 at well-child visits in an urban clinic.
Guardians of 206 children (85% Latinx) ages 6-11 completed Child Behavior Checklists (CBCL) in Spanish (66.5%) or English at well-child visits at an urban community health center. We performed linear regression between number of sports played and individual CBCL syndrome scores, and multiple logistic regression with normal (T-score <60) vs. elevated (T-score ≥60) CBCL syndrome scale score as the outcome. We conducted bivariate, multiple logistic regression, and linear regression analyses between low (1 or fewer) vs. high (2 or more) sports participators and subscales of interest.
Fewer sports played was associated with higher Withdrawn/Depressed CBCL syndrome scale T-scores (p = 0.019), but not with other CBCL syndrome scale scores nor number of syndrome scale elevations (p = 0.638). Low participators had higher odds of an elevated Withdrawn/Depressed T-score (p = 0.033) than high participators.
Our dataset did not contain certain details about sports played, nor information about income and insurance, and our results may not generalize to other populations.
Playing fewer sports is associated with higher withdrawn/depressed symptoms in urban, predominantly Latinx, school-age children. Therefore, urban school-age children with low sports participation may be at risk for depression, and sports participation might protect against depressive symptoms in childhood.
运动参与和心理健康之间的关系尚未在小学龄儿童的初级保健样本中进行研究,也未在代表性不足的少数族裔儿童中进行研究。我们评估了在城市诊所的儿童常规健康检查中,6-11 岁儿童运动次数与精神症状之间的关系。
206 名(85%为拉丁裔)6-11 岁儿童的监护人在城市社区健康中心进行儿童常规健康检查时,用西班牙语(66.5%)或英语填写儿童行为检查表(CBCL)。我们在进行线性回归时,将运动次数与个体 CBCL 综合征评分进行比较,在进行多项逻辑回归时,将正常(T 评分<60)与升高(T 评分≥60)的 CBCL 综合征量表评分作为因变量。我们对低(1 次或更少)和高(2 次或更多)运动参与者之间以及感兴趣的子量表之间进行了双变量、多项逻辑回归和线性回归分析。
运动次数较少与 withdrawn/Depressed CBCL 综合征量表 T 评分较高(p=0.019)相关,但与其他 CBCL 综合征量表评分或综合征量表升高次数无关(p=0.638)。低运动参与者出现 elevated/Depressed T 评分升高的可能性高于高运动参与者(p=0.033)。
我们的数据集没有包含关于运动次数的某些细节,也没有关于收入和保险的信息,我们的结果可能不适用于其他人群。
在城市中,运动参与次数较少与拉丁裔为主的小学龄儿童的 withdrawn/depressed 症状较高有关。因此,运动参与度较低的城市学龄儿童可能有患抑郁症的风险,而运动参与可能有助于预防儿童期的抑郁症状。