- Title
- Temporal Trends in the Standing Broad Jump Performance of 10,940,801 Children and Adolescents Between 1960 and 2017
- Creator
- Tomkinson, Grant R.; Kaster, Tori; Dooley, Faith L.; Fitzgerald, John S.; Annandale, Madison; Ferrar, Katia; Lang, Justin J.; Smith, Jordan J.
- Relation
- Sports Medicine Vol. 51, Issue 3, p. 531-548
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40279-020-01394-6
- Publisher
- Adis International
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2020
- Description
- Background: The standing broad jump (SBJ) is an excellent functional measure of explosive lower-body strength that is significantly related to health among children and adolescents. Objectives: The aim of this study was to estimate national (country-level) and international (pooled global data) temporal trends in SBJ performance for children and adolescents, and to examine the relationships between national trends in SBJ performance and national trends in health-related and socioeconomic/demographic indicators. Methods: Data were obtained from a systematic search of studies reporting temporal trends in SBJ performance for 9- to 17-year-olds, and by examining national fitness datasets. Sample-weighted regression models estimated trends at the study/dataset-country-sex-age level, with national and international trends estimated by a post-stratified population-weighting procedure. Pearson’s correlations quantified relationships between national trends in SBJ performance and national trends in health-related and socioeconomic/demographic indicators. Results: Data from 34 studies/datasets were extracted to estimate trends for 10,940,801 children and adolescents from 24 high-, 4 upper-middle-, and 1 low-income countries between 1960 and 2017. Collectively, there was a negligible (per decade) improvement in SBJ performance of 1.73 cm (95% CI 1.71–1.75), 0.99% (95% CI 0.97–1.01) or a standardized effect size of 0.07 (0.07–0.07) over the entire period, with the rate of improvement steady from the 1960s to the 1980s, slowing in the 1990s, before declining. Sex- and age-related temporal differences were negligible. Trends differed between countries, with most countries experiencing declines. National trends in SBJ performance were not significantly related to national trends in health-related and socioeconomic/demographic indicators. Conclusions: SBJ performance of children and adolescents has declined since 2000 (at least among most of the countries in this analysis) and is suggestive of a modern decline in functional explosive lower-body strength. Growing recognition of the importance of muscular fitness as a marker of population health highlights the need for continued tracking of temporal trends in SBJ, especially among low- and lower-middle-income countries for which temporal data are lacking. PROSPERO Registration Number: CRD42013003657.
- Subject
- adolescent; child; controlled study; demography; effect size; female
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1445762
- Identifier
- uon:42663
- Identifier
- ISSN:0112-1642
- Language
- eng
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