Salway Ruth, House Danielle, Walker Robert, Emm-Collison Lydia, Breheny Katie, Sansum Kate, Williams Joanna G, Hollingworth William, de Vocht Frank, Jago Russell
Centre for Exercise, Nutrition & Health Sciences, School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Public Health Res (Southampt). 2024 Oct;12(16):147-168. doi: 10.3310/WQJK9893.
Schools play a crucial role in facilitating physical activity among children, but the COVID-19 pandemic has affected both children's physical activity and the school environment. It is essential to understand between-school differences in children's physical activity post lockdown, to determine if and how the role of schools has changed.
Active-6 is a natural experiment comparing postlockdown accelerometer-estimated physical activity to a pre-COVID-19 comparator group. Accelerometer and individual data were collected on 1296 children aged 10-11 pre-COVID-19 (2017-8), with school characteristics collected from the 50 schools they attended. Post lockdown, we collected accelerometer, individual and school data from 393 children in 23 of the same schools and 436 children in 27 of the same schools in 2021 (Wave 1) and 2022 (Wave 2), respectively.
Sources of variation (between-school, between-pupil and within-pupil) in child weekday moderate to vigorous physical activity at each wave were modelled using linear mixed-effects models with school-level wave random coefficients. We extended the model to estimate the proportion of between-school variation explained by school policy, curriculum and physical environment factors and school-aggregated pupil characteristics. We also explored the extent to which postlockdown differences in moderate to vigorous physical activity were mediated by individual or school factors.
Between-school variation comprised 13% of the total variation pre-COVID-19, 7% in Wave 1 and 13% in Wave 2. School factors associated with moderate to vigorous physical activity were the following: whether physical education was compromised due to space (often: 9 minutes lower moderate to vigorous physical activity; sometimes: 5.4 minutes lower); high after-school club attendance (7 minutes higher moderate to vigorous physical activity for each additional club attended on average in the school); cycle training policy (4 minutes higher moderate to vigorous physical activity); and higher prevalence of active travel (1 minute higher moderate to vigorous physical activity for each 10% point increase in prevalence). These factors explained 22% of the between-school variation pre-COVID-19, and 72% at Wave 2. The relative importance changed, with cycle training policy and active travel being the most important pre-COVID-19 and cycle training policy, active after-school clubs and compromised physical education space most important in Wave 2. No factors were found to mediate the postlockdown differences in moderate to vigorous physical activity, except compromised physical education space, which had a suppressor effect in Wave 2.
Only 27 of the initial 50 schools participated post lockdown, limiting our ability to make comparisons across waves. Sample sizes were additionally affected by missing data for some variables.
While schools continue to play an important role in facilitating children's physical activity, the factors that contribute to this have changed post-COVID-19, with cycle training, active after-school clubs and ensuring physical education is prioritised even when space is limited now explaining nearly three-quarters of the between-school variation in children's moderate to vigorous physical activity. School-level interventions that focus on these areas, and policies that support them, may offer the potential to increase children's physical activity.
This article presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Public Health Research programme as award number NIHR131847.
学校在促进儿童体育活动方面发挥着关键作用,但新冠疫情影响了儿童的体育活动以及学校环境。了解封锁后不同学校儿童体育活动的差异,以确定学校的作用是否以及如何发生了变化,这至关重要。
Active-6是一项自然实验,将封锁后通过加速度计估算的体育活动与新冠疫情前的对照组进行比较。在新冠疫情前(2017 - 2018年)收集了1296名10 - 11岁儿童的加速度计和个人数据,并从他们就读的50所学校收集了学校特征数据。封锁后,我们分别于2021年(第1波)和2022年(第2波)从同一23所学校的393名儿童以及同一27所学校的436名儿童中收集了加速度计、个人和学校数据。
使用具有学校层面波随机系数的线性混合效应模型,对每一波儿童工作日中度至剧烈体育活动的变异来源(学校间、学生间和学生内)进行建模。我们扩展了模型,以估计由学校政策、课程和体育环境因素以及学校汇总的学生特征所解释学校间变异的比例。我们还探讨了封锁后中度至剧烈体育活动差异在多大程度上由个体或学校因素介导。
学校间变异在新冠疫情前占总变异的13%,在第1波中占7%,在第2波中占13%。与中度至剧烈体育活动相关的学校因素如下:体育课是否因空间问题受到影响(经常:中度至剧烈体育活动减少9分钟;有时:减少5.4分钟);课外俱乐部参与率高(学校中平均每多参加一个俱乐部,中度至剧烈体育活动增加7分钟);自行车训练政策(中度至剧烈体育活动增加4分钟);以及积极出行的比例较高(积极出行比例每增加10个百分点,中度至剧烈体育活动增加1分钟)。这些因素在新冠疫情前解释了22%的学校间变异,在第2波中解释了72%。相对重要性发生了变化,自行车训练政策和积极出行在新冠疫情前最为重要,而在第2波中自行车训练政策、活跃的课外俱乐部和受限的体育教育空间最为重要。除了受限的体育教育空间在第2波中具有抑制作用外,未发现有因素介导封锁后中度至剧烈体育活动的差异。
最初的50所学校中只有27所学校在封锁后参与,限制了我们跨波次进行比较的能力。样本量还受到一些变量数据缺失的影响。
虽然学校在促进儿童体育活动方面继续发挥重要作用,但新冠疫情后促成这一作用的因素发生了变化,自行车训练、活跃的课外俱乐部以及即使空间有限也要确保体育课优先安排,现在解释了儿童中度至剧烈体育活动学校间变异的近四分之三。关注这些领域的学校层面干预措施以及支持它们的政策,可能有潜力增加儿童的体育活动。
本文介绍了由国家卫生与保健研究机构(NIHR)公共卫生研究项目资助的独立研究,资助编号为NIHR131847。