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- Title
Covid Pandemic Effects on the Physical Fitness of Primary School Children: Results of the German EMOTIKON Project.
- Authors
Teich, Paula; Fühner, Thea; Bähr, Florian; Puta, Christian; Granacher, Urs; Kliegl, Reinhold
- Abstract
Background: In spring of 2020, the Sars-CoV-2 incidence rate increased rapidly in Germany and around the world. Throughout the next 2 years, schools were temporarily closed and social distancing measures were put in place to slow the spread of the Covid-19 virus. Did these social restrictions and temporary school lockdowns affect children’s physical fitness? The EMOTIKON project annually tests the physical fitness of all third-graders in the Federal State of Brandenburg, Germany. The tests assess cardiorespiratory endurance (6-min-run test), coordination (star-run test), speed (20-m sprint test), lower (powerLOW, standing long jump test), and upper (powerUP, ball-push test) limbs muscle power, and static balance (one-legged stance test with eyes closed). A total of 125,893 children were tested in the falls from 2016 to 2022. Primary analyses focused on 98,510 keyage third-graders (i.e., school enrollment according to the legal key date, aged 8 to 9 years) from 515 schools. Secondary analyses included 27,383 older-than-keyage third-graders (i.e., OTK, delayed school enrollment or repetition of a grade, aged 9 to 10 years), who have been shown to exhibit lower physical fitness than expected for their age. Linear mixed models fitted pre-pandemic quadratic secular trends, and took into account differences between children and schools. Results: Third-graders exhibited lower cardiorespiratory endurance, coordination, speed and powerUP in the Covid pandemic cohorts (2020–2022) compared to the pre-pandemic cohorts (2016–2019). Children’s powerLOW and static balance were higher in the pandemic cohorts compared to the pre-pandemic cohorts. From 2020 to 2021, coordination, powerLOW and powerUP further declined. Evidence for some post-pandemic physical fitness catch-up was restricted to powerUP. Cohen’s |ds| for comparisons of the pandemic cohorts 2020–2022 with pre-pandemic cohorts 2016–2019 ranged from 0.02 for powerLOW to 0.15 for coordination. Within the pandemic cohorts, keyage children exhibited developmental losses ranging from approximately 1 month for speed to 5 months for cardiorespiratory endurance. For powerLOW and static balance, the positive pandemic effects translate to developmental gains of 1 and 7 months, respectively. Pre-pandemic secular trends may account for some of the observed differences between pandemic and pre-pandemic cohorts, especially in powerLOW, powerUP and static balance. The pandemic further increased developmental delays of OTK children in cardiorespiratory endurance, powerUP and balance. Conclusions: The Covid-19 pandemic was associated with declines in several physical fitness components in German third-graders. Pandemic effects are still visible in 2022. Health-related interventions should specifically target those physical fitness components that were negatively affected by the pandemic (cardiorespiratory endurance, coordination, speed).Key points: Third-graders exhibited lower cardiorespiratory endurance, coordination, speed, and upper limbs muscle power in the Covid cohorts (2020–2022) compared to the pre-pandemic cohorts (2016–2019). Children’s lower limbs muscle power and static balance were higher in the pandemic compared to the pre-pandemic cohorts. Pandemic-related effects on the physical fitness of children are small in effect size, but reflect developmental losses of approximately 5 months for cardiorespiratory endurance, 3 months for coordination, 1 month for speed, and 2 months for upper limbs muscle power. Developmental gains of 1 month were found for lower limbs muscle power and 7 months for static balance. However, pre-pandemic secular trends explain some of the observed changes, especially in lower and upper limbs muscle power, and static balance. Children with delayed school enrollment already exhibited poorer physical fitness than expected for their age before the pandemic. Their physical fitness impairments further increased during the pandemic years.
- Publication
Sports Medicine - Open, 2023, Vol 9, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2199-1170
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1186/s40798-023-00624-1