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Effects of home confinement on physical activity, nutrition, and sleep quality during the COVID-19 outbreak in amateur and elite athletes
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IntroductionDespite the progress in the management of the pandemic caused by COVID-19, it is necessary to continue exploring and explaining how this situation affected the athlete population around the world to improve their circumstances and reduce the negative impact of changes in their lifestyle conditions that were necessitated due to the pandemic. The aim of this study was to analyze the moderating influence of physical activity (PA) and dietary habits on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic experience on sleep quality in elite and amateur athletes.Materials and methodsA total of 1,420 elite (40.1%) and amateur (59.9%) athletes (41% women; 59% men) from 14 different countries participated in a cross-sectional design study. Data were collected using a battery of questionnaires that identified sociodemographic data, sleep quality index, PA levels, dietary habits, and the athletes' perception of their experience during the COVID-19 pandemic. Means and standard deviations were calculated for each variable. The analysis of variances and the correlation between variables were carried out with non-parametric statistics. A simple moderation effect was calculated to analyze the interaction between PA or dietary habits on the perception of the COVID-19 experience effect on sleep quality in elite and amateur athletes.ResultsThe PA level of elite athletes was higher than amateur athletes during COVID-19 (p < 0.001). However, the PA level of both categories of athletes was lower during COVID-19 than pre-COVID-19 (p < 0.01). In addition, amateurs had a higher diet quality than elite athletes during the pandemic (p = 0.014). The perception of the COVID-19 experience as controllable was significantly higher (p = 0.020) among elite athletes. In addition, two moderating effects had significant interactions. For amateur athletes, the PA level moderated the effect of controllable COVID-19 experience on sleep quality [F(3,777) = 3.05; p = 0.028], while for elite athletes, the same effect was moderated by dietary habits [F(3,506) = 4.47, p = 0.004].ConclusionElite athletes had different lifestyle behaviors compared to amateurs during the COVID-19 lockdown. Furthermore, the relevance of maintaining high levels of PA for amateurs and good quality dietary habits by elite athletes was noted by the moderating effect that both variables had on the influence of the controllable experience during the COVID-19 pandemic on sleep quality.
Frontiers Media SA
Morteza Taheri
Kadijeh Irandoust
Luis Felipe Reynoso-Sánchez
Hussein Muñoz-Helú
Karla Noelia Cruz-Morales
Raymundo Torres-Ramírez
Masoud Mirmoezzi
Leila Youzbashi
Fatemeh Mirakhori
Ismail Dergaa
Rodrigo Luiz Vancini
Leonardo Jose Mataruna-Dos-Santos
Diana Korinna Zazueta-Beltrán
Hassane Zouhal
Roxana Abril Morales-Beltrán
Yusuf Soylu
Amairani Molgado-Sifuentes
Juan González-Hernández
Germán Hernández-Cruz
Luis Bernardo Bojorquez Castro
Cem Kurt
Khaled Trabelsi
Hamdi Chtourou
Ali Seghatoleslami
Manuel Octavio López-Camacho
Ramón Ernesto Mendoza-Baldenebro
Farnaz Torabi
Helmi Ben Saad
Jad Adrian Washif
Jana Strahler
Andressa Fontes Guimarães-Mataruna
Tyler W. Lebaron
Ebrahim Shaabani Ezdini
Marjan Sadat Rezaei
Mozhgan Moshtagh
Fatma Hilal Yagin
Mehmet Gülü
Atefeh Esmaeili
Patrick Müller
Achraf Ammar
Egeria Scoditti
Sergio Garbarino
Luca Puce
Nicola Luigi Bragazzi
Hadi Nobari
Title: Effects of home confinement on physical activity, nutrition, and sleep quality during the COVID-19 outbreak in amateur and elite athletes
Description:
IntroductionDespite the progress in the management of the pandemic caused by COVID-19, it is necessary to continue exploring and explaining how this situation affected the athlete population around the world to improve their circumstances and reduce the negative impact of changes in their lifestyle conditions that were necessitated due to the pandemic.
The aim of this study was to analyze the moderating influence of physical activity (PA) and dietary habits on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic experience on sleep quality in elite and amateur athletes.
Materials and methodsA total of 1,420 elite (40.
1%) and amateur (59.
9%) athletes (41% women; 59% men) from 14 different countries participated in a cross-sectional design study.
Data were collected using a battery of questionnaires that identified sociodemographic data, sleep quality index, PA levels, dietary habits, and the athletes' perception of their experience during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Means and standard deviations were calculated for each variable.
The analysis of variances and the correlation between variables were carried out with non-parametric statistics.
A simple moderation effect was calculated to analyze the interaction between PA or dietary habits on the perception of the COVID-19 experience effect on sleep quality in elite and amateur athletes.
ResultsThe PA level of elite athletes was higher than amateur athletes during COVID-19 (p < 0.
001).
However, the PA level of both categories of athletes was lower during COVID-19 than pre-COVID-19 (p < 0.
01).
In addition, amateurs had a higher diet quality than elite athletes during the pandemic (p = 0.
014).
The perception of the COVID-19 experience as controllable was significantly higher (p = 0.
020) among elite athletes.
In addition, two moderating effects had significant interactions.
For amateur athletes, the PA level moderated the effect of controllable COVID-19 experience on sleep quality [F(3,777) = 3.
05; p = 0.
028], while for elite athletes, the same effect was moderated by dietary habits [F(3,506) = 4.
47, p = 0.
004].
ConclusionElite athletes had different lifestyle behaviors compared to amateurs during the COVID-19 lockdown.
Furthermore, the relevance of maintaining high levels of PA for amateurs and good quality dietary habits by elite athletes was noted by the moderating effect that both variables had on the influence of the controllable experience during the COVID-19 pandemic on sleep quality.
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