4.6 Article

Adolescents' Sports and Exercise Environments in a US Time Use Survey

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE MEDICINE
Volume 39, Issue 2, Pages 122-129

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2010.03.022

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background: Studies examining environmental influences on adolescent physical activity largely measure the presence and availability of social resources and built environment facilities. Unfortunately, this research approach provides limited information about adolescents' social company during exercise or the extent to which adolescents actually use physical settings for physical activity. Purpose: The current study used data from the nationally representative American Time Use Survey (2003-2006) to describe demographic and temporal patterns in the social and physical contexts of physical activity among adolescents. Methods: The sample consisted of high school students (aged 15-18 years) reporting at least one bout of sports or exercise (N=867). During the interview, participants reported where (e.g., outdoors, home, work) and with whom (e.g., alone, family, friends) each bout occurred. Sample-weighted multinomial logistic regression analyses compared the proportion of bouts occurring in each environment by age, gender, family income, season, weekend/weekday, and time of day, controlling for race/ethnicity. Data were analyzed in 2009. Results: Girls were more likely to exercise with family (22% vs 16%), and less likely to exercise with friends/acquaintances/others (47% vs 52%) and outdoors (18% vs 24%) than boys. Compared with those aged 15 years, a larger proportion of exercise bouts among those aged 18 years occurred alone (23% vs 18%); and a smaller proportion occurred at home (14% vs 20%), at someone else's house (5% vs 12%), and at school (14% vs 27%) (p's<0.001). Conclusions: Information about the social and physical contexts of adolescents' sports and exercise can help guide the selection of future environmental targets for investigation and intervention. (Am J Prey Med 2010;39(2):122-129) (C) 2010 American Journal of Preventive Medicine

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available