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Journal Article

Citation

Warsh J, Pickett W, Janssen I. Obes. Facts 2010; 3(4): 225-230.

Affiliation

Department of Community Health and Epidemiology, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Karger Publishers)

DOI

10.1159/000319322

PMID

20823685

Abstract

Objective: To determine whether relationships between physical activity and physical activity injuries are modified by BMI status in youth. Method: Data were obtained from the 2006 Canadian Health Behaviour in School-Aged Children survey; a representative study of 7,714 grade 6-10 youth. A sub-sample of 1,814 were re-administered the survey in 2007. Analyses considered relationships among the major variables in theory-driven crosssectional and longitudinal analyses. Result: Among normal weight youth, cross-sectional analyses indicated that those who reported high levels of physical activity outside of school experienced 2.28 (95% confidence interval 1.95-2.68) the relative odds for physical activity injury in comparison to those with low levels of physical activity outside of school. Analogous odds ratios for overweight and obese youth were 1.89 (1.31-2.72) and 3.72 (1.89-7.33), respectively. BMI status was not an effect modifier of the relationship between physical activity and physical activity injury. Similar observations were made in the confirmatory longitudinal analyses. Conclusion: Concerns surrounding the design of physical activity programmes include side-effects such as injury risk. This study provides some re-assurance that physical activity participation relates to injury in a consistent manner across BMI groups.


Language: en

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