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P05-09 Associations of the physical activity-related injuries with selected variables in adolescents - results of the pilot study

BACKGROUND: Physical activity (PA) as health promotion tool is not one without adverse effects and adolescents with nonfatal physical activity-related injuries (PARI) may experience serious health consequences for the rest of their lives. METHODS: As a part of the pilot study of the Health Behaviour...

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Autores principales: Bakalár, Peter, Kopčáková, Jaroslava, Tlučáková, Lenka, Ružbarská, Beáta, Vašková, Monika, Karchynskaya, Viktoryia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9421873/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac095.076
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author Bakalár, Peter
Kopčáková, Jaroslava
Tlučáková, Lenka
Ružbarská, Beáta
Vašková, Monika
Karchynskaya, Viktoryia
author_facet Bakalár, Peter
Kopčáková, Jaroslava
Tlučáková, Lenka
Ružbarská, Beáta
Vašková, Monika
Karchynskaya, Viktoryia
author_sort Bakalár, Peter
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Physical activity (PA) as health promotion tool is not one without adverse effects and adolescents with nonfatal physical activity-related injuries (PARI) may experience serious health consequences for the rest of their lives. METHODS: As a part of the pilot study of the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children Study conducted in October and November 2021 in Slovakia, we surveyed 119 adolescents (53 girls; average age 12,6±2,0) for moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), medically attended injuries (MAI), physical activity-related injuries in sports clubs (PARISC), physical activity-related injuries in leisure-time (PARILT) and physical activity-related injuries in schools (PARIS) and we measured their cardiorespiratory fitness (using 20-metre shuttle run) and their body composition (using InBody 230). RESULTS: Out of 119 adolescents, 50 (42%) were attending sports clubs of which 27 (54%) had one or more PARI in sports clubs' activities in previous year, 50 adolescents (42%) had PARI in leisure activities and 15 (12,6%) in school activities. PARISC led to an average of 10 missed days from school or leisure-time activities. PARILT led to 7,2 missed days and PARIS led to 6,2 missed days. Spearman's correlations (n = 50 for PARISC and n = 119 for PARILT and PARIS) revealed associations between MAI and PARISC, PARILT and PARIS, but not between MVPA or 20-metre shuttle run laps and PARISC, PARILT and PARIS. Not surprisingly, percentage of body fat was negatively associated with the number of 20-metre shuttle run laps. In addition, results of crude linear regression models showed that frequency of MVPA was not associated with frequencies of PARISC (B coefficients (B)/95% CI: 0,03/-0,11-0,18), PARILT (B/95% CI: 0,04/-0,05-0,13) or PARIS (B/95% CI: -0,02/-0,07-0,02) among Slovak adolescents in our pilot study. CONCLUSIONS: Estimating the burden of PARI is important in advocating the need of directing sufficient resources to PARI prevention along with the PA promotion. Improvement and understanding of factors associated with PARI might be helpful in PARI prevention. In addition, it might, among other factors, play a role in promotion of active lifestyle in adolescence.
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spelling pubmed-94218732022-08-29 P05-09 Associations of the physical activity-related injuries with selected variables in adolescents - results of the pilot study Bakalár, Peter Kopčáková, Jaroslava Tlučáková, Lenka Ružbarská, Beáta Vašková, Monika Karchynskaya, Viktoryia Eur J Public Health Poster Presentations BACKGROUND: Physical activity (PA) as health promotion tool is not one without adverse effects and adolescents with nonfatal physical activity-related injuries (PARI) may experience serious health consequences for the rest of their lives. METHODS: As a part of the pilot study of the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children Study conducted in October and November 2021 in Slovakia, we surveyed 119 adolescents (53 girls; average age 12,6±2,0) for moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), medically attended injuries (MAI), physical activity-related injuries in sports clubs (PARISC), physical activity-related injuries in leisure-time (PARILT) and physical activity-related injuries in schools (PARIS) and we measured their cardiorespiratory fitness (using 20-metre shuttle run) and their body composition (using InBody 230). RESULTS: Out of 119 adolescents, 50 (42%) were attending sports clubs of which 27 (54%) had one or more PARI in sports clubs' activities in previous year, 50 adolescents (42%) had PARI in leisure activities and 15 (12,6%) in school activities. PARISC led to an average of 10 missed days from school or leisure-time activities. PARILT led to 7,2 missed days and PARIS led to 6,2 missed days. Spearman's correlations (n = 50 for PARISC and n = 119 for PARILT and PARIS) revealed associations between MAI and PARISC, PARILT and PARIS, but not between MVPA or 20-metre shuttle run laps and PARISC, PARILT and PARIS. Not surprisingly, percentage of body fat was negatively associated with the number of 20-metre shuttle run laps. In addition, results of crude linear regression models showed that frequency of MVPA was not associated with frequencies of PARISC (B coefficients (B)/95% CI: 0,03/-0,11-0,18), PARILT (B/95% CI: 0,04/-0,05-0,13) or PARIS (B/95% CI: -0,02/-0,07-0,02) among Slovak adolescents in our pilot study. CONCLUSIONS: Estimating the burden of PARI is important in advocating the need of directing sufficient resources to PARI prevention along with the PA promotion. Improvement and understanding of factors associated with PARI might be helpful in PARI prevention. In addition, it might, among other factors, play a role in promotion of active lifestyle in adolescence. Oxford University Press 2022-08-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9421873/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac095.076 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Poster Presentations
Bakalár, Peter
Kopčáková, Jaroslava
Tlučáková, Lenka
Ružbarská, Beáta
Vašková, Monika
Karchynskaya, Viktoryia
P05-09 Associations of the physical activity-related injuries with selected variables in adolescents - results of the pilot study
title P05-09 Associations of the physical activity-related injuries with selected variables in adolescents - results of the pilot study
title_full P05-09 Associations of the physical activity-related injuries with selected variables in adolescents - results of the pilot study
title_fullStr P05-09 Associations of the physical activity-related injuries with selected variables in adolescents - results of the pilot study
title_full_unstemmed P05-09 Associations of the physical activity-related injuries with selected variables in adolescents - results of the pilot study
title_short P05-09 Associations of the physical activity-related injuries with selected variables in adolescents - results of the pilot study
title_sort p05-09 associations of the physical activity-related injuries with selected variables in adolescents - results of the pilot study
topic Poster Presentations
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9421873/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac095.076
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