3.9 Article

The Most Active Child Is Not Always the Fittest: Physical Activity and Fitness Are Weakly Correlated

Journal

SPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/sports11010003

Keywords

PAQ-C; physical tests; active children; non-active children; sedentary; physical skills; coordinative capabilities; conditional capabilities

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This cross-sectional study in Italian children aimed to assess the impact of physical activity level (PA) on physical fitness, while controlling for individual characteristics. The study found significant relationships between PA and physical fitness tests, except for sit-and-reach from BMI. However, these relationships are influenced by individual characteristics such as gender, age, and BMI.
The present cross-sectional study aimed to evaluate the impact of physical activity level (PA) on physical fitness by controlling for individual characteristics in Italian children. A total of 329 children (girls n = 155, 42.6%; from five primary schools, 17 classes) aged 8-10 filled out the Physical Activity Questionnaire for Older Children (PAQ-C) to assess their PA level and performed anthropometric measurements (body mass, height, and BMI) and physical tests for measuring sprint (20 m sprint), cardiorespiratory fitness (shuttle-run test), balance (single-leg stance), handgrip strength (handgrip), lower-limb power (standing long-jump), peak force (countermovement jump), and low-back flexibility (sit-and-reach) skills. Linear mixed-effects models were applied to determine the relationship between physical fitness and PAQ-C score controlling for individual characteristics (i.e., gender, age, BMI). Results reported significant relationships between PAQ-C scores and sit-and-reach, shuttle-run, long-jump, and sprint tests. All considered physical tests were correlated with gender, age, and BMI, except for sit-and-reach from BMI. The variance in age, gender, BMI, and PAQ-C score accounted altogether for 30.0% of the variance in handgrip, 23.0% in single-leg stance, 26% in sit-and-reach, 36% in shuttle-run, 31% in long-jump, 34% in sprint, and 31% in countermovement jump. Therefore, the relationship between PA and fitness is not absolute and depends on the test and children's characteristics.

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