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Physical fitness and obesity levels during an academic year followed by summer holidays: an issue of insufficient time for physical activity

  • George Aphamis EMAIL logo , Yiannakis Ioannou and Christoforos D. Giannaki

Abstract

Today, available time for physical activity has been continuously decreasing, whilst, school-time physical education (PE) classes appear to be the only real option for many adolescents to engage in physical activity and exercise. The aim of the present study was to investigate fitness and health related parameters over one academic year, and after the summer holidays for adolescents who do not engage in out-of-school physical activities. Participants were 153 students (age: 15–17 years; boys n = 86) who exercised only during PE (2 × 45-min periods per week). Body fat, flexibility, handgrip strength, squat jump, 30 m sprint and cardiorespiratory fitness were examined at the beginning and end of a school year, and after the ensuing summer holidays. The boys improved handgrip and flexibility, but no other significant improvement was observed over the school year in any of the examined physical fitness parameters, or obesity indices. Instead, the girls’ cardiorespiratory fitness decreased over the summer holidays. It seems that exercising only twice a week during school PE classes is insufficient to induce significant improvements in physical fitness, body composition and health parameters.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank all the students who volunteered for the purposes of the study as well as Mrs. Maria Theofanous, Mr. Nikos Achniotis and Mrs. Evanthia Andreou for their help and support.

  1. Declaration of conflicting interests: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

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Received: 2016-11-08
Accepted: 2017-03-10
Published Online: 2017-06-09

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