Exploring the Link Between Physical Activity, Sports Participation, and Loneliness in Adolescents Before and Into the COVID-19 Pandemic: The HUNT Study, Norway
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35802Date
2024-10-25Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Rangul, Vegar; Sund, Erik Reidar; Ingul, Jo Magne; Rimehaug, Tormod; Pape, Kristine; Kvaløy, KirstiAbstract
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic’s effects on adolescents’ physical activity, sports
involvement, and feelings of loneliness remain inadequately understood. This study aimed to explore
the shifts in leisure-time physical activity, sports participation, and loneliness among adolescents
before and during the pandemic, positing that the pandemic has led to decreased physical activity
and sports engagement, as well as heightened loneliness, where more active adolescents experience
lower loneliness levels. This study included a prior four-year follow-up cohort from the same region
two decades earlier to explore the existence of typical longitudinal aging effects in a cohort not
affected by the pandemic. Methods: Prospective and longitudinal data from two cohorts of the
Young-HUNT Study two decades apart involving adolescents aged 13–19 years were utilized. The
controls were as follows: Cohort 1 from the Young-HUNT1 (YH1) Survey included 2399 adolescents with follow-up in the Young-HUNT2 (YH2) Survey four years later. Cohort 2 included the
Young-HUNT4 (YH4) Survey (2017–2019) of 8066 adolescents, with a subset of 1565 participants
followed up in the Young-HUNT COVID Survey (YHC) (2021) after exposure to the COVID-19
pandemic and associated restrictions. Changes over time were assessed using McNemar’s tests and
dependent sample T-tests, while multinomial logistic regression modeled within-individual changes
in loneliness, adjusting for age, gender, and other factors. Results: The findings revealed a significant
decline in physical activity and sports participation in both cohorts from early to late adolescence.
Additionally, there was a considerable increase in reported loneliness, more after exposure to the
pandemic and especially among girls, but without any difference in historical initial levels (between
cohorts). Inactive adolescents faced a greater risk of increased loneliness, while those participating
in sports had a lower risk of loneliness. Physically inactive boys had a higher risk of loneliness
compared with physically active boys at both time points in Cohort 2, which was higher than in
the control Cohort 1. There was no historical difference between initial assessments. Conclusion:
Adolescents experienced a significant decrease in physical activity and sports participation, along
with increased loneliness, from early to late adolescence. Given the protective benefits of physical
activity against loneliness and the negative longitudinal trends observed, public health initiatives
should focus on increasing physical activity and reducing sports drop-out rates among adolescents to
combat rising loneliness.
Publisher
MDPICitation
Rangul VR, Sund E, Ingul JMI, Rimehaug TR, Pape K, Kvaløy K. Exploring the Link Between Physical Activity, Sports Participation, and Loneliness in Adolescents Before and Into the COVID-19 Pandemic: The HUNT Study, Norway. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (IJERPH). 2024Metadata
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