Tanaka Chiaki, Lee Eun-Young, Tanaka Shigeho
Department of Human Nutrition, Tokyo Kasei Gakuin University, 22 Sanbancho, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 102-8341, Japan.
National Institute of Health and Nutrition, National Institutes of Biomedical Innovation, Health and Nutrition, Settsu, Osaka 566-0002, Japan.
Sports (Basel). 2025 May 28;13(6):165. doi: 10.3390/sports13060165.
Sports participation according to socioeconomic status (SES) was related to children in high-income Western countries. This study aimed to examine whether family or neighborhood-level SES is associated with current and continued organized sports participation, including the types of sports, among Japanese primary school children from preschool onward. The participants consisted of 269 girls, 255 boys, and their parents. Data on the type of sports participation at the current school or preschool, parental employment, and education were collected by questionnaire. Neighborhood-level SES was evaluated by the average annual income within 4 km of each school. The odds of sports participation was higher among children with mothers identifying as housewives or those with mothers employed part-time. Among girls, the odds of continued sports participation were lower if their mothers were junior high school or high school graduates or junior college/vocational school graduates. The odds of sports type like swimming were higher for children whose mothers had part-time jobs. Lower average community income was associated with lower participation in football and higher participation in baseball. These findings suggest that mothers' employment and academic background are important correlates of sports participation for children, with variations observed by sport type and gender.
在高收入西方国家,儿童的体育参与情况与社会经济地位(SES)相关。本研究旨在探讨家庭或社区层面的社会经济地位是否与日本小学生从学前阶段起的当前及持续的有组织体育参与相关,包括体育项目类型。参与者包括269名女孩、255名男孩及其父母。通过问卷调查收集了当前学校或幼儿园的体育参与类型、父母职业和教育程度的数据。社区层面的社会经济地位通过每所学校周边4公里范围内的平均年收入来评估。母亲为家庭主妇或母亲为兼职工作的孩子参与体育活动的几率更高。在女孩中,如果母亲是初中或高中毕业生或大专/职业学校毕业生,持续参与体育活动的几率较低。母亲从事兼职工作的孩子参与游泳等体育项目的几率更高。社区平均收入较低与足球参与率较低和棒球参与率较高相关。这些发现表明,母亲的就业情况和学历背景是儿童体育参与的重要相关因素,且因体育项目类型和性别存在差异。