Understanding Youth Athlete Motivation, Training, and Activity Progression During and After the COVID-19 Sports Interruption
# Background COVID-19 restrictions created a period of disrupted sports participation for youth athletes. The physical conditioning, sports training habits, and patterns of sports activity resumption upon returning to normal sports activity are currently unknown. # Purpose/Hypothesis This study a...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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North American Sports Medicine Institute
2022-12-01
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Series: | International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.26603/001c.40372 |
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author | Elliot Greenberg Eric Greenberg J. Todd Lawrence Theodore Ganley |
author_facet | Elliot Greenberg Eric Greenberg J. Todd Lawrence Theodore Ganley |
author_sort | Elliot Greenberg |
collection | DOAJ |
description | # Background
COVID-19 restrictions created a period of disrupted sports participation for youth athletes. The physical conditioning, sports training habits, and patterns of sports activity resumption upon returning to normal sports activity are currently unknown.
# Purpose/Hypothesis
This study aimed to determine the extent to which youth athletes maintained their training levels during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic and understand the strategies that enhanced motivation and adherence to a training regimen while in isolation. A secondary aim was to analyze how youth athletes returned to activity and identify injuries associated with prolonged sports interruption.
# Study Design
Observational / Survey Study
# Methods
A survey designed to determine activity changes, type of organized instruction, and athlete preferences for training support were distributed by email using snowball sampling methodology to athletes 14-21 years old who were involved in competitive sports when pandemic restrictions were enacted. As sports activities resumed, a follow-up survey was distributed to the same respondents to identify feelings of preparedness, training habits, and injuries.
# Results
Of the155 subjects (mean age 16.1 ± 2 years, 64.5% female) that completed the initial survey, 98% reported a stoppage of in-person sports participation and 70% decreased their exercise/training volume, with 41% (n=63) reporting \> 50% reduction. Most athletes (86%) received instruction from coaches, with written workouts (70%) being most common; however, most athletes (70%) preferred instructor-led, group training sessions. Of the 43 subjects that completed the follow-up survey (34% response rate), there was an increase in athletic exposures compared to mid-pandemic levels, and 25% reported sustaining a sports-related injury shortly after resuming sports activities.
# Conclusions
Pandemic-related sports restrictions resulted in a significant reduction in youth athlete training and conditioning. Coaches attempted to maintain training via the use of written workouts; however, athletes preferred instructor-led, group training sessions. There was a rapid resumption of sports activities, which may have contributed to the high rate of injuries in this study.
# Level of Evidence
3 |
format | Article |
id | doaj-art-06196ff4a6ce4038bc65f052ca3bf3bf |
institution | Kabale University |
issn | 2159-2896 |
language | English |
publishDate | 2022-12-01 |
publisher | North American Sports Medicine Institute |
record_format | Article |
series | International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy |
spelling | doaj-art-06196ff4a6ce4038bc65f052ca3bf3bf2025-02-11T20:27:49ZengNorth American Sports Medicine InstituteInternational Journal of Sports Physical Therapy2159-28962022-12-01177Understanding Youth Athlete Motivation, Training, and Activity Progression During and After the COVID-19 Sports InterruptionElliot GreenbergEric GreenbergJ. Todd LawrenceTheodore Ganley# Background COVID-19 restrictions created a period of disrupted sports participation for youth athletes. The physical conditioning, sports training habits, and patterns of sports activity resumption upon returning to normal sports activity are currently unknown. # Purpose/Hypothesis This study aimed to determine the extent to which youth athletes maintained their training levels during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic and understand the strategies that enhanced motivation and adherence to a training regimen while in isolation. A secondary aim was to analyze how youth athletes returned to activity and identify injuries associated with prolonged sports interruption. # Study Design Observational / Survey Study # Methods A survey designed to determine activity changes, type of organized instruction, and athlete preferences for training support were distributed by email using snowball sampling methodology to athletes 14-21 years old who were involved in competitive sports when pandemic restrictions were enacted. As sports activities resumed, a follow-up survey was distributed to the same respondents to identify feelings of preparedness, training habits, and injuries. # Results Of the155 subjects (mean age 16.1 ± 2 years, 64.5% female) that completed the initial survey, 98% reported a stoppage of in-person sports participation and 70% decreased their exercise/training volume, with 41% (n=63) reporting \> 50% reduction. Most athletes (86%) received instruction from coaches, with written workouts (70%) being most common; however, most athletes (70%) preferred instructor-led, group training sessions. Of the 43 subjects that completed the follow-up survey (34% response rate), there was an increase in athletic exposures compared to mid-pandemic levels, and 25% reported sustaining a sports-related injury shortly after resuming sports activities. # Conclusions Pandemic-related sports restrictions resulted in a significant reduction in youth athlete training and conditioning. Coaches attempted to maintain training via the use of written workouts; however, athletes preferred instructor-led, group training sessions. There was a rapid resumption of sports activities, which may have contributed to the high rate of injuries in this study. # Level of Evidence 3https://doi.org/10.26603/001c.40372 |
spellingShingle | Elliot Greenberg Eric Greenberg J. Todd Lawrence Theodore Ganley Understanding Youth Athlete Motivation, Training, and Activity Progression During and After the COVID-19 Sports Interruption International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy |
title | Understanding Youth Athlete Motivation, Training, and Activity Progression During and After the COVID-19 Sports Interruption |
title_full | Understanding Youth Athlete Motivation, Training, and Activity Progression During and After the COVID-19 Sports Interruption |
title_fullStr | Understanding Youth Athlete Motivation, Training, and Activity Progression During and After the COVID-19 Sports Interruption |
title_full_unstemmed | Understanding Youth Athlete Motivation, Training, and Activity Progression During and After the COVID-19 Sports Interruption |
title_short | Understanding Youth Athlete Motivation, Training, and Activity Progression During and After the COVID-19 Sports Interruption |
title_sort | understanding youth athlete motivation training and activity progression during and after the covid 19 sports interruption |
url | https://doi.org/10.26603/001c.40372 |
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