Evaluation of pre-Games effects of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games on Japanese population-level physical activity: a time-series analysis.

IF 5.5
Shiho Amagasa, Masamitsu Kamada, Adrian E Bauman, Motohiko Miyachi, Shigeru Inoue
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Abstract

Background: The Olympic Games represent an opportunity to create a 'physical activity legacy' that promotes physical activity at the population level in the host nations and cities. However, previous studies showed little increase in population-level physical activity following the Olympics. The upsurge of public interest in sports and physical activity participation before the Olympics may diminish rapidly following the Games. We examined the pre-Games effects of the Olympics on Japanese population-level physical activity after the announcement of Tokyo's successful bid for the 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games in September 2013.

Methods: We used publicly available data from serial cross-sectional surveys conducted with nationally or regionally representative samples in Japan seven years before and after the announcement (from 2006-2020). The outcomes were 1) daily step counts and 2) exercise habit prevalence (≥ 30 min/day, ≥ 2 days/week, and over a year) from the National Health and Nutrition Surveys Japan (NHNS-J; 14 time points; aggregated data); and 3) sports participation (at least once a week) from the National Sports-Life Survey conducted every two years (NSLS; eight time points; individual-level data of 18,867 adults) and from the Public Opinion Survey on Sports Participation of Tokyo Residents (POSSP; eight time points; aggregated data). Age- and gender-adjusted regression models were used to estimate changes in the outcomes before and after the announcement.

Results: There were no significant pre-Games effects of the Olympics on national-level physical activity participation among Japanese adults. Sports participation (56.4% and 57.5%, respectively; P = 0.518), daily steps (6,535 and 6,686 steps/day; P = 0.353), and exercise habit (30.7% and 29.1%, P = 0.309) did not change significantly before and after the announcement. Although an increase in sports participation among Tokyo residents was not found in the NSLS (61.5% and 59.3%, P = 0.227), it was observed in the POSSP (49.1% and 57.7%, P = 0.019). Nonetheless, this increase might not be related to the pre-Games effects since the trend diminished following the announcement.

Conclusions: Population-level physical activity did not show significant changes until 2020. Realising the physical activity legacy of an Olympics may require strategic promotion and cross-agency partnership implementation in the pre- and post-event period.

Abstract Image

2020年东京奥运会对日本人口水平体育活动的赛前影响评估:时间序列分析。
背景:奥运会提供了一个创造“体育活动遗产”的机会,在东道国和城市的人口层面上促进体育活动。然而,之前的研究显示,奥运会后人口水平的体育活动几乎没有增加。奥运会前公众对体育和体育活动参与的兴趣高涨,可能会在奥运会后迅速消退。在2013年9月东京宣布成功申办2020年奥运会和残奥会之后,我们研究了奥运会对日本人口体育活动的赛前影响。方法:我们使用了公告前后七年(2006-2020年)在日本进行的具有全国或地区代表性样本的系列横断面调查的公开数据。结果是1)每日步数和2)运动习惯的流行程度(≥30分钟/天,≥2天/周,一年以上),来自日本国家健康与营养调查(NHNS-J;14个时间点;聚合数据);3)每两年进行一次的全国体育生活调查(NSLS)的体育参与情况(每周至少一次);八个时间点;18867名成年人的个人数据)和东京居民体育参与民意调查(posp;八个时间点;聚合数据)。使用年龄和性别调整的回归模型来估计公告前后结果的变化。结果:奥运会对日本成年人参加国家级体育活动没有显著的赛前影响。体育参与(分别为56.4%和57.5%);P = 0.518),每日步数(6,535和6,686步/天;P = 0.353),运动习惯(30.7%和29.1%,P = 0.309)在公告前后无显著变化。虽然东京居民体育参与的增加在NSLS中没有发现(61.5%和59.3%,P = 0.227),但在posp中发现了(49.1%和57.7%,P = 0.019)。尽管如此,这种增长可能与奥运会前的影响无关,因为这一趋势在宣布后减弱了。结论:人口水平的身体活动直到2020年才显示出显著的变化。实现奥运会的体育活动遗产可能需要在赛前和赛后实施战略推广和跨机构伙伴关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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