Eime Rochelle, Harvey Jack, Charity Melanie
Physical Activity and Sport Insights, Institute of Health and Wellbeing, Federation University, Ballarat, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2025 Jan 28;25(1):353. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-21601-1.
Internationally, COVID-19 restrictions impacted negatively on participation in sport and physical activity. Participation in community club sport was particularly disrupted with cancelled training and competitions, and this has been shown to impact the health of individuals. We now need to investigate the effects of the lifting of COVID-19 restrictions.
The aim of this study was to longitudinally investigate the health of Australian adult sports club participants, during and post-COVID-19 restrictions.
Two waves of an online survey were conducted in mid-2020 and mid-2021. The first wave also captured retrospective pre-COVID19 (2019) data. For each year 2019-2021 each survey respondent was categorized as participating (Yes/No) in club sport. Respondents also assessed their current health (overall, physical and mental) in both 2020 and 2021. The six health assessments were cross-tabulated against three patterns of participation (dropout, dropout and return, continuation), for the survey sample overall and for six demographic subsamples: 42 crosstabulations in all.
A total of 1,037 Australians aged 18 years and above completed both survey waves. Those who continued playing club sport throughout, and to a lesser degree those who returned to club sport in 2021, reported better physical and general health than those who dropped out. This pattern was consistent, for the overall survey sample and for the sub-samples based on gender, age and region of residence, with statistically significantly associations (p < 0.05) in 24 of 28 analyses. The pattern of club sport participation was only weakly associated with reported mental health, with only one of 14 associations being statistically significant.
Changes in club sport participation impact general and physical health of adults; continuation or return were associated with better physical and general health than drop-out. There was little evidence of an association between participation in sport and mental health, which is inconsistent with previously reported cross-sectional results; this may be due to a combination of factors, including confounding with the broader effects of the pandemic. In conclusion, it is clear that retention in participation in sport is not just important for sports management policy and strategies; it is also important for the health of individuals.
在国际上,新冠疫情防控措施对体育活动和身体锻炼的参与产生了负面影响。社区俱乐部体育活动的参与尤其受到干扰,训练和比赛被取消,而且这已被证明会影响个人健康。我们现在需要调查新冠疫情防控措施解除后的影响。
本研究的目的是纵向调查新冠疫情防控期间及之后澳大利亚成年体育俱乐部参与者的健康状况。
在2020年年中及2021年年中进行了两波在线调查。第一波调查还收集了新冠疫情之前(2019年)的回顾性数据。对于2019 - 2021年的每一年,每位调查受访者被归类为是否参与(是/否)俱乐部体育活动。受访者还在2020年和2021年评估了他们当前的健康状况(总体、身体和心理)。针对整个调查样本以及六个人口子样本,将这六项健康评估与三种参与模式(退出、退出后又回归、持续参与)进行交叉制表,总共进行42次交叉制表。
共有1037名18岁及以上的澳大利亚人完成了两波调查。那些一直持续参与俱乐部体育活动的人,以及在较小程度上那些在2021年回归俱乐部体育活动的人,报告的身体和总体健康状况比那些退出的人更好。这种模式在整个调查样本以及基于性别、年龄和居住地区的子样本中都是一致的,在28项分析中的24项中具有统计学显著关联(p < 0.05)。俱乐部体育活动参与模式与报告的心理健康仅存在微弱关联,14项关联中只有1项具有统计学显著性。
俱乐部体育活动参与的变化会影响成年人的总体和身体健康;持续参与或回归参与比退出参与与更好的身体和总体健康状况相关。几乎没有证据表明体育活动参与与心理健康之间存在关联,这与先前报告的横断面研究结果不一致;这可能是多种因素共同作用的结果,包括与疫情更广泛影响的混杂因素。总之,显然保持体育活动参与不仅对体育管理政策和策略很重要;对个人健康也很重要。