Drole Kristina, Paravlic Armin, Coakley Jay, Doupona Mojca
Faculty of Sport, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Sociology Department, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, CO, United States.
Front Psychol. 2023 May 12;14:1173261. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1173261. eCollection 2023.
Since the coronavirus disease outbreak in 2019, there have been several preventive measures and restrictions applied to minimize the transmission of the virus. While lockdown has affected our everyday lives, it has negatively impacted sport and athletes as well.
1,387 Slovenian dual-career (DC) athletes (47.4% females, 52.6% males) participated in the 22-item questionnaire to gather information on their sports and academic engagement before and during COVID-19 lockdown period. Half of the athletes were enrolled in education at the secondary level ( = 819, aged 15-18 years), while the others were enrolled in primary ( = 301, 8-14 years) and tertiary ( = 267, 19-36 years) education. All participants in the current study have a valid athlete categorization by the Slovenian Olympic Committee and are competing at either junior (31.7%), national (26.9%), prospective (29.5%), international (8.5%), world (2.3%) or Olympic (1.2%) level.
DC athletes spent less time on training (-4.7 h; < 0.001), learning (-1.0 h; < 0.001), exams (-0.9 h; < 0.001), laboratory work (-0.6 h; < 0.001), and other educational activities (-0.3 h; < 0.001) during COVID-19 lockdown compared to period before the lockdown. Their training environment was changed so they trained either at home or outdoors. Results showed that indoor (-3.7 h; < 0.001) and team sport athletes (-1.3 h; < 0.001) trained less than outdoor and individual sports. Male athletes spent more time on training both before (1.3 h; < 0.001) and during lockdown (1.3 h; < 0.001) and other sport-related activities (1.3 h; < 0.001). On the other hand, female athletes spent more time on studying both before (1.5 h; < 0.001) and during lockdown (2.6 h; < 0.001). Both sport and educational activities were influenced by athletes' age ( ≤ 0.017).
Indoor and team sport athletes were more affected by the governmental measures than outdoor and individual sport athletes. Male athletes experienced a greater decline in learning time compared to female athletes. DC is shown to be beneficial for athletes even in times of COVID-19 lockdown, as DC athletes report smaller decline in motivation, shifting attention from sport to study and having fewer mental problems due to uncertain sports future. The feedback of the preventive measures could serve to assist policy makers and athlete's support staff to form and apply preventive measures that are more effective for DC athletes' training and education.
自2019年冠状病毒病爆发以来,已采取了多项预防措施和限制措施,以尽量减少病毒传播。虽然封锁影响了我们的日常生活,但它也对体育和运动员产生了负面影响。
1387名斯洛文尼亚双职业(DC)运动员(47.4%为女性,52.6%为男性)参与了这项包含22个项目的问卷调查,以收集他们在新冠疫情封锁之前和期间的体育和学业参与情况的信息。一半的运动员接受中等教育(n = 819,年龄在15 - 18岁),而其他人分别接受小学教育(n = 301,8 - 14岁)和高等教育(n = 267,19 - 36岁)。本研究的所有参与者都由斯洛文尼亚奥林匹克委员会进行了有效的运动员分类,并且在青少年(31.7%)、国家(26.9%)、准国际(29.5%)、国际(8.5%)、世界(2.3%)或奥运会(1.2%)级别参赛。
与封锁前相比,双职业运动员在新冠疫情封锁期间花在训练(-4.7小时;p < 0.001)、学习(-1.0小时;p < 0.001)、考试(-0.9小时;p < 0.001)、实验工作(-0.6小时;p < 0.001)和其他教育活动(-0.3小时;p < 0.001)上的时间减少。他们的训练环境发生了变化,因此他们要么在家中训练,要么在户外训练。结果表明,室内(-3.7小时;p < 0.001)和团队运动运动员(-1.3小时;p < 0.001)的训练时间比户外和个人运动运动员少。男性运动员在封锁前(1.3小时;p < 0.001)和封锁期间(1.3小时;p < 0.001)以及其他与体育相关的活动(1.3小时;p < 0.001)上花费的时间更多。另一方面,女性运动员在封锁前(-1.5小时;p < 0.001)和封锁期间(-2.6小时;p < 0.001)花在学习上的时间更多。体育和教育活动均受到运动员年龄的影响(p ≤ 0.017)。
与户外和个人运动运动员相比,室内和团队运动运动员受政府措施的影响更大。与女性运动员相比,男性运动员在学习时间上的下降幅度更大。即使在新冠疫情封锁期间双职业对运动员也是有益的,因为双职业运动员报告称其动机下降幅度较小,注意力从体育转移到学习,并且由于体育未来不确定而出现心理问题的情况较少。预防措施的反馈可为政策制定者和运动员支持人员提供帮助,以制定和应用对双职业运动员的训练和教育更有效的预防措施。