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Physical activity patterns in Portuguese adolescents: The contribution of extracurricular sports
29
Citations
27
References
2010
Year
Physical ActivityAdapted Physical ActivityEducationPortuguese AdolescentsSports ConsumptionExtracurricular ActivitiesKinesiologyEc SportsPhysical EducationPhysical ExercisePublic HealthSport ScienceHealth SciencesSport ParticipationDanceSport Injury PreventionPhysical FitnessHealth PromotionExtracurricular SportsVigorous Physical ActivityPhysical Activity PatternsPhysical Activity EpidemiologyExercise PhysiologyChildhood Physical ActivityWomen's Exercise CultureAthletic TrainingCommunity ClubsExercise Interventions
In Portugal, two sports systems exist, one through schools and the other in community clubs. The purpose was to determine the impact of extra-curricular sports (EC sports) on boys’ and girls’ moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA). 208 adolescents (79 boys and 129 girls), between 12 and 18 years old, wore an accelerometer over seven days. Four EC sport categories based on reported involvement were: no sports, school sports, club sports, both sports. Multivariable logistic regression was used to study the association of EC sports, age, gender and BMI on the adolescent’s MVPA. The school sport context was more relevant for girls than clubs sport; however the opposite pattern emerged for boys. BMI was not related to adolescent’s MVPA. EC sports increase the likelihood of achieving PA guidelines. The unique social and environmental contexts of school and club sports deserve additional attention in youth activity research.
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