COVID-19 Lockdown: A Global Study Investigating the Effect of Athletes' Sport Classification and Sex on Training Practices.

Détails

Ressource 1Demande d'une copie Sous embargo indéterminé.
Accès restreint UNIL
Etat: Public
Version: de l'auteur⸱e
Licence: Non spécifiée
ID Serval
serval:BIB_EB884B52894F
Type
Article: article d'un périodique ou d'un magazine.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
COVID-19 Lockdown: A Global Study Investigating the Effect of Athletes' Sport Classification and Sex on Training Practices.
Périodique
International journal of sports physiology and performance
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Washif J.A., Sandbakk Ø., Seiler S., Haugen T., Farooq A., Quarrie K., Janse van Rensburg D.C., Krug I., Verhagen E., Wong D.P., Mujika I., Cortis C., Haddad M., Ahmadian O., Al Jufaili M., Al-Horani R.A., Al-Mohannadi A.S., Aloui A., Ammar A., Arifi F., Aziz A.R., Batuev M., Beaven C.M., Beneke R., Bici A., Bishnoi P., Bogwasi L., Bok D., Boukhris O., Boullosa D., Bragazzi N., Brito J., Palacios Cartagena R.P., Chaouachi A., Cheung S.S., Chtourou H., Cosma G., Debevec T., DeLang M.D., Dellal A., Dönmez G., Driss T., Peña Duque J.D., Eirale C., Elloumi M., Foster C., Franchini E., Fusco A., Galy O., Gastin P.B., Gill N., Girard O., Gregov C., Halson S., Hammouda O., Hanzlíková I., Hassanmirzaei B., Hébert-Losier K., Muñoz Helú H., Herrera-Valenzuela T., Hettinga F.J., Holtzhausen L., Hue O., Dello Iacono A., Ihalainen J.K., James C., Joseph S., Kamoun K., Khaled M., Khalladi K., Kim K.J., Kok L.Y., MacMillan L., Mataruna-Dos-Santos L.J., Matsunaga R., Memishi S., Millet G.P., Moussa-Chamari I., Musa D.I., Nguyen HMT, Nikolaidis P.T., Owen A., Padulo J., Pagaduan J.C., Perera N.P., Pérez-Gómez J., Pillay L., Popa A., Pudasaini A., Rabbani A., Rahayu T., Romdhani M., Salamh P., Sarkar A.S., Schillinger A., Setyawati H., Shrestha N., Suraya F., Tabben M., Trabelsi K., Urhausen A., Valtonen M., Weber J., Whiteley R., Zrane A., Zerguini Y., Zmijewski P., Ben Saad H., Pyne D.B., Taylor L., Chamari K.
ISSN
1555-0273 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1555-0265
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
01/08/2022
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
17
Numéro
8
Pages
1242-1256
Langue
anglais
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: epublish
Résumé
To investigate differences in athletes' knowledge, beliefs, and training practices during COVID-19 lockdowns with reference to sport classification and sex. This work extends an initial descriptive evaluation focusing on athlete classification.
Athletes (12,526; 66% male; 142 countries) completed an online survey (May-July 2020) assessing knowledge, beliefs, and practices toward training. Sports were classified as team sports (45%), endurance (20%), power/technical (10%), combat (9%), aquatic (6%), recreational (4%), racquet (3%), precision (2%), parasports (1%), and others (1%). Further analysis by sex was performed.
During lockdown, athletes practiced body-weight-based exercises routinely (67% females and 64% males), ranging from 50% (precision) to 78% (parasports). More sport-specific technical skills were performed in combat, parasports, and precision (∼50%) than other sports (∼35%). Most athletes (range: 50% [parasports] to 75% [endurance]) performed cardiorespiratory training (trivial sex differences). Compared to prelockdown, perceived training intensity was reduced by 29% to 41%, depending on sport (largest decline: ∼38% in team sports, unaffected by sex). Some athletes (range: 7%-49%) maintained their training intensity for strength, endurance, speed, plyometric, change-of-direction, and technical training. Athletes who previously trained ≥5 sessions per week reduced their volume (range: 18%-28%) during lockdown. The proportion of athletes (81%) training ≥60 min/session reduced by 31% to 43% during lockdown. Males and females had comparable moderate levels of training knowledge (56% vs 58%) and beliefs/attitudes (54% vs 56%).
Changes in athletes' training practices were sport-specific, with few or no sex differences. Team-based sports were generally more susceptible to changes than individual sports. Policy makers should provide athletes with specific training arrangements and educational resources to facilitate remote and/or home-based training during lockdown-type events.
Mots-clé
Athletes, COVID-19/epidemiology, COVID-19/prevention & control, Communicable Disease Control, Female, Humans, Male, Sports, Surveys and Questionnaires, crowd-sourced data, multinational sample, online survey, perception, remote training
Pubmed
Web of science
Création de la notice
30/07/2022 17:35
Dernière modification de la notice
21/07/2023 5:59
Données d'usage