Clark V Claire, Ulman Sophia M, Erdman Ashley L, Gale Emily B, Janosky Joseph, Stapleton Emily J
Scottish Rite for Children, Frisco, TX, United States.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, United States.
Front Psychol. 2025 Apr 1;16:1525074. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1525074. eCollection 2025.
Individuals strongly tied to their athletic sense of self, athletic identity, may have increased sport specialization and behaviors elevating injury risk, overtraining, and mental health concerns. No known studies have explored the relationship between athletic identity, specialization, and youth athletes' mental health concerns, specifically anxiety and depression. This study assessed the relationship between athletic identity, specialization, and mental health symptoms among female, high school athletes.
Athletic identity and mental health were assessed via the Athletic Identity Measurement Scale (AIMS) and Revised Children's Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS). A sport participation survey recorded injury history, specialization, and training volume. Mann -Whitney U tests compared RCADS scores between high athletic identity (>54 total AIMS) and low athletic identity (<55 total AIMS; α = 0.05) athletes.
A total of 149 female volleyball athletes were included (16.0 ± 0.9 years), with 54.4% (81/149) classified as high athletic identity. Injury rates did not significantly differ between high and low athletic identity groups. Highly specialized athletes differed on multiple RCADS subscales, with high athletic identity correlated with greater separation anxiety ( = 0.012), generalized anxiety ( = 0.006), social phobia ( = 0.020), depression ( = 0.011), total anxiety ( = 0.005), and total anxiety and depression ( = 0.002). The moderately specialized group did not differ in RCADS scores between high and low athletic identity athletes.
Those with high athletic identity practiced more and had more anxiety and depressive symptoms than those with low athletic identity but were not at higher injury risk for injury. Providers should consider routine mental health screenings for high athletic identity athletes and promote psychoeducation on the importance of developing coping skills and diverse interests outside of one's primary sport.
与运动自我认知紧密相连的个体,即运动身份认同,可能会增加运动专项化程度以及提升受伤风险、过度训练和心理健康问题的行为。尚无已知研究探讨运动身份认同、专项化与青少年运动员心理健康问题(特别是焦虑和抑郁)之间的关系。本研究评估了高中女运动员的运动身份认同、专项化与心理健康症状之间的关系。
通过运动身份测量量表(AIMS)和修订版儿童焦虑与抑郁量表(RCADS)评估运动身份认同和心理健康。一项运动参与调查记录了受伤史、专项化程度和训练量。曼-惠特尼U检验比较了高运动身份认同(AIMS总分>54)和低运动身份认同(AIMS总分<55;α = 0.05)运动员的RCADS得分。
共纳入149名女排运动员(16.0±0.9岁),其中54.4%(81/149)被归类为高运动身份认同。高、低运动身份认同组之间的受伤率无显著差异。高度专项化的运动员在多个RCADS子量表上存在差异,高运动身份认同与更高的分离焦虑(=0.012)、广泛性焦虑(=0.006)、社交恐惧症(=0.020)、抑郁(=0.011)、总焦虑(=0.005)以及总焦虑和抑郁(=0.002)相关。中等专项化组的高、低运动身份认同运动员在RCADS得分上无差异。
高运动身份认同的人比低运动身份认同的人训练更多,且有更多焦虑和抑郁症状,但受伤风险并不更高。医疗服务提供者应考虑对高运动身份认同的运动员进行常规心理健康筛查,并促进关于培养应对技能和在主要运动之外发展多种兴趣的重要性的心理教育。