Physical (In)Activity Gender Gap of Slovak Non-athlete Adolescents

Physiology Test (biology) physical activity Social Sciences non-athlete population Adolescents Slovak 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Sociology Health Sciences Developmental and Educational Psychology FOS: Mathematics Pathology Psychology Biology Demography Global Trends in Obesity and Overweight Research Physical activity Statistics Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health Adolescent boys and girls gender gap Paleontology Developmental Perspective on Motor Skill Competence Linguistics Physical Activity Physical Literacy FOS: Sociology FOS: Philosophy, ethics and religion FOS: Psychology Descriptive statistics Philosophy Effects of Physical Activity on Health Outcomes FOS: Biological sciences GV557-1198.995 FOS: Languages and literature Medicine Physical therapy Czech Sitting Mathematics Sports
DOI: 10.17309/tmfv.2023.2.18 Publication Date: 2023-04-28T15:13:14Z
ABSTRACT
Study purpose. Declining levels of physical activity in adolescence are of increasing concern, with data showing the difference of ≥ 8% by gender in favor of adolescent boys; therefore, the present study aims at determining physical (in)activity gender gap of non-athlete adolescent boys and girls in Slovakia. Materials and methods. Standardized measure to estimate the habitual practice of physical activity (IPAQ-SF) was carried out six months (January – June, 2022), through the intentional sampling of 1 517 Slovak non-athlete adolescent boys (40.54%, n = 615) and girls (59.46%, n = 902), aged 18 – 19 years (18.50 ± 0.50 years), attending the secondary schools. Descriptive statistics (e.g., measures of frequency, central tendency), two-sample t-test and chi-square test (x2) were used to analyze and compare the data. Results. When considering the physical activity (seven-day week) in adolescence, the Slovak non-athlete adolescent boys and girls reported: (i) high levels of physical activity – 51.73% (n = 785); (ii) moderate levels of physical activity – 25.92% (n = 393); (iii) low levels of physical activity – 22.35% (n = 339) (p ˂ 0.01). When considering the gender gap in physical activity in adolescence, total physical activity (seven-day week), expressed in MET-minutes/ week, was lower (statistically, p ˂ 0.01; difference of 712 MET-minutes/ week) among the Slovak non-athlete adolescent girls (1 898 MET-minutes/ week), compared to boys (2 610 MET-minutes/ week). And when considering the gender gap and sitting time (sedentary behavior), the Slovak non-athlete adolescent girls were more sedentary, compared to boys (p ˃ 0.05) (360 vs. 330 minutes/ week). Conclusions. Constant low levels of physical activity in adolescence constitute the public health emergency of international concern; therefore, the urgent policy action to increase the physical activity is necessary; in particular, in promoting and retaining the adolescent girls’ participation in physical activity.
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