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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Training During the COVID-19 Lockdown: Knowledge, Beliefs, and Practices of 12,526 Athletes from 142 Countries and Six Continents
Johanna K. IhalainenKwang Joon KimFatona SurayaLone BogwasiAbu Sufian SarkarOmar HammoudaTarak DrissOmar BoukhrisIvana HanzlíkováEvert VerhagenDaniel BoullosaCristina CortisAndrea FuscoAbdulaziz FarooqHeny SetyawatiAvishkar PudasainiJad Adrian WashifOlivier GirardLee TaylorJuan David Peña DuqueCristiano EiralePallawi BishnoiAxel UrhausenRalph BenekePantelis T. NikolaidisLian-yee KokGürhan DönmezGrégoire P. MilletTandiyo RahayuKarim KhalladiAbdulla Saeed Al-mohannadiYacine ZerguiniFitim ArifiPaul B. GastinNicola BragazziMaarit ValtonenHussein Muñoz HelúAchraf AmmarMohamed RomdhaniAndy SchillingerAdam OwenKarim KamounMonoem HaddadMontassar TabbenØYvind SandbakkCvita GregovMahmood Al JufailiNicholas GillCarl FosterOlivier GalyDina Christina Janse Van RensburgThomas A. HaugenSaju JosephDaniel BokKhaled TrabelsiMohamed ElloumiJohnny PaduloFlorentina J. HettingaIñigo MujikaAdel ZraneHamdi ChtourouMikhail BatuevKarim ChamariNirmala Kanthi Panagodage PereraArben BiciDanladi I. MusaRoxana Paola Palacios CartagenaChristopher Martyn BeavenGermina CosmaRodney WhiteleyLeonardo Jose Mataruna-dos-santosCarl JamesShona L. HalsonLewis MacmillanRyo MatsunagaA DellalPiotr ZmijewskiAsma AlouiIsabel KrugBahar HassanmirzaeiKim Hébert-losierAbdul Rashid AzizTadej DebevecLervasen PillayAnis ChaouachiHoang Minh Thuan NguyenMehdi KhaledShpresa MemishiImen Moussa-chamariPaul A. SalamhAlireza RabbaniStephen SeilerDel P. WongHelmi Ben SaadNavina ShresthaJorge Pérez-gómezLouis HoltzhausenJeffrey PagaduanAntonio Dello IaconoEmerson FranchiniArporn PopaStephen S. CheungJohanna WeberOlivier HueMatthew D. DelangJoão BritoRamzi Al-horaniTomás Herrera-valenzuelaOmid AhmadianDavid B. Pynesubject
PANDEMIASmedicine.medical_specialtySports medicine[SHS.EDU]Humanities and Social Sciences/EducationeducationPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationCoachingInterval trainingIntensity Frequency Session durationAthletic training[SDV.MHEP.PHY]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Tissues and Organs [q-bio.TO]medicineHumansPlyometricsharjoitteluOrthopedics and Sports MedicineOriginal Research ArticlevalmennusPandemicsGeneral fitness trainingbiologySARS-CoV-2business.industryAthleteskuntoliikuntaCOVID-19biology.organism_classificationMental healthC600AthletespoikkeusolotCommunicable Disease Control0913 Mechanical Engineering 1106 Human Movement and Sports Sciences 1302 Curriculum and PedagogyPhysical therapy[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologieAthletes/psychology; COVID-19; Communicable Disease Control; Humans; Pandemics; SARS-CoV-2businessSport Sciencesurheilijathuippu-urheilijatdescription
Abstract Objective Our objective was to explore the training-related knowledge, beliefs, and practices of athletes and the influence of lockdowns in response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Methods Athletes (n = 12,526, comprising 13% world class, 21% international, 36% national, 24% state, and 6% recreational) completed an online survey that was available from 17 May to 5 July 2020 and explored their training behaviors (training knowledge, beliefs/attitudes, and practices), including specific questions on their training intensity, frequency, and session duration before and during lockdown (March–June 2020). Results Overall, 85% of athletes wanted to “maintain training,” and 79% disagreed with the statement that it is “okay to not train during lockdown,” with a greater prevalence for both in higher-level athletes. In total, 60% of athletes considered “coaching by correspondence (remote coaching)” to be sufficient (highest amongst world-class athletes). During lockdown, < 40% were able to maintain sport-specific training (e.g., long endurance [39%], interval training [35%], weightlifting [33%], plyometric exercise [30%]) at pre-lockdown levels (higher among world-class, international, and national athletes), with most (83%) training for “general fitness and health maintenance” during lockdown. Athletes trained alone (80%) and focused on bodyweight (65%) and cardiovascular (59%) exercise/training during lockdown. Compared with before lockdown, most athletes reported reduced training frequency (from between five and seven sessions per week to four or fewer), shorter training sessions (from ≥ 60 to < 60 min), and lower sport-specific intensity (~ 38% reduction), irrespective of athlete classification. Conclusions COVID-19-related lockdowns saw marked reductions in athletic training specificity, intensity, frequency, and duration, with notable within-sample differences (by athlete classification). Higher classification athletes had the strongest desire to “maintain” training and the greatest opposition to “not training” during lockdowns. These higher classification athletes retained training specificity to a greater degree than others, probably because of preferential access to limited training resources. More higher classification athletes considered “coaching by correspondence” as sufficient than did lower classification athletes. These lockdown-mediated changes in training were not conducive to maintenance or progression of athletes’ physical capacities and were also likely detrimental to athletes’ mental health. These data can be used by policy makers, athletes, and their multidisciplinary teams to modulate their practice, with a degree of individualization, in the current and continued pandemic-related scenario. Furthermore, the data may drive training-related educational resources for athletes and their multidisciplinary teams. Such upskilling would provide athletes with evidence to inform their training modifications in response to germane situations (e.g., COVID related, injury, and illness).
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-10-23 |