Appelqvist-Schmidlechner Kaija, Heikkinen Risto, Vasankari Tommi, Virtanen Toni, Pihlainen Kai, Honkanen Tuomas, Kyröläinen Heikki, Vaara Jani P
Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare, Equality Unit, Helsinki, Finland.
Centre for Military Medicine, Helsinki, Finland.
Arch Public Health. 2023 Feb 17;81(1):26. doi: 10.1186/s13690-023-01040-3.
Evidence on the relationship between psychosocial well-being and physical activity (PA) is insufficient, especially in young adults between 18 and 29 years. Identifying protective factors for psychosocial well-being as well as factors that may promote PA behaviour in this specific age group is crucial.The aim of the present study was to explore the association between self-reported leisure time physical activity (LTPA) and a number of measures of psychosocial well-being in a large sample of Finnish young men. The sample used for this study is based on registers of the Finnish Defence Forces and consist of questionnaire-based data collected from 159,776 young healthy men (18-29 years, mean age 19 years) who started their military service during the period from 2015 to 2021. Sum scores were calculated for self-esteem and prosocial behaviour. Physical activity, number of friends and the relationship with the parents were each measured with a single question. Unadjusted and adjusted (education, financial situation of the family, family structure) logistic regression models were calculated.A multinominal logistic regression analysis showed that a higher level of LTPA was associated with a higher level of both prosocial behaviour (OR 6.12, 95% CI 5.88-6.36) and self-esteem (OR 4.41 95% CI 4.28-4.54). Further, LTPA had a positive relationship with good social relations, both with peers and parents. The odds ratio for participation in any LTPA weekly was higher (OR 2.74; CI 2.27-3.20) among those who had a close and trustworthy relationship with their parents compared to those men with more challenging relationships with their parents (OR 1.77; CI 1.46-2.14). An inactive lifestyle (PA less than once a week) seemed to be most common among men with no friends. About one third (31%) of men with no friends reported to engage in LTPA less than once a week, while only 10% of men with very many good friends reported to engage in similarly inactive LTPA behaviour.LTPA seems to be positively associated with self-esteem, prosocial behaviour and good social relations among young adult men. Actions aimed at promoting LTPA may have a positive impact on psychosocial well-being among young men, or vice versa. The relationship between PA and psychosocial well-being is complex and interrelated.
关于心理社会幸福感与身体活动(PA)之间关系的证据并不充分,尤其是在18至29岁的年轻人中。确定心理社会幸福感的保护因素以及可能促进这一特定年龄组身体活动行为的因素至关重要。本研究的目的是在大量芬兰年轻男性样本中探讨自我报告的休闲时间身体活动(LTPA)与多种心理社会幸福感指标之间的关联。本研究使用的样本基于芬兰国防军的登记记录,由从159776名年轻健康男性(18至29岁,平均年龄19岁)收集的基于问卷的数据组成,这些男性在2015年至2021年期间开始服兵役。计算了自尊和亲社会行为的总分。身体活动、朋友数量以及与父母的关系均通过单个问题进行测量。计算了未调整和调整后的(教育程度、家庭经济状况、家庭结构)逻辑回归模型。多项逻辑回归分析表明,较高水平的LTPA与较高水平的亲社会行为(比值比6.12,95%置信区间5.88 - 6.36)和自尊(比值比4.41,95%置信区间4.28 - 4.54)相关。此外,LTPA与良好的社会关系呈正相关,包括与同龄人和父母的关系。与父母关系亲密且值得信赖的男性每周参与任何LTPA的比值比更高(比值比2.74;置信区间2.27 - 3.20)相较于与父母关系更具挑战性的男性(比值比1.77;置信区间1.46 - 2.14)。无朋友的男性中不活跃的生活方式(PA每周少于一次)似乎最为常见。约三分之一(31%)无朋友的男性报告每周参与LTPA少于一次,而只有十分之一有很多好朋友的男性报告有类似不活跃的LTPA行为。LTPA似乎与年轻成年男性的自尊、亲社会行为和良好社会关系呈正相关。旨在促进LTPA的行动可能对年轻男性的心理社会幸福感产生积极影响,反之亦然。PA与心理社会幸福感之间的关系是复杂且相互关联的。