Participation in team sports does not necessarily result in teenage boys adopting healthier behaviours, a new study says.
Participation in team sports does not necessarily result in teenage boys adopting healthier behaviours, a new study says. Instead, it is linked to increased fighting and drinking.
The study surveyed a nationally representative sample of more than 13,000 high school students across the United States to examine the association between sports team participation and risky behaviours.Of the male respondents, 60.5 percent reported participation in team sports in the past year.
For these young men, sports team participation was associated with increased levels of self-reported fighting (OR 1.3), drinking (OR 1.4) and binge drinking (OR 1.4).
However, participation was also associated with decreased levels of depression (OR 0.7) and smoking (OR 0.8).
Of the female high school students, 48 percent reported participation on one or more sports team in the past year.
For this group, sports team participation was associated with decreased levels of fighting (OR 0.9), depression (OR 0.7), smoking (OR 0.5), marijuana use (OR 0.7) and unhealthy weight loss practices (OR 0.9).
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"Sports team participation appears to have both protective and risk-enhancing associations," said Susan M. Connor, PhD, lead researcher on the study.
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The study was presented at the American Public Health Association's 137th Annual Meeting and Exposition in Philadelphia.
Source-ANI
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