Authors
Markus J Duncan, Nicholas Kuzik, Diego Augusto Santos Silva, Richard E Bélanger, Valerie Carson, Jean-Philippe Chaput, Guy Faulkner, Mark A Ferro, Anne-Marie Turcotte-Tremblay, Scott T Leatherdale, Karen A Patte, Mark S Tremblay
Publication date
2024/3/1
Journal
Mental Health and Physical Activity
Volume
26
Pages
100572
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Among adolescents, gender groups who report less healthful movement behaviours also tend to experience lower mental health status. Adolescent girls often report lower levels of physical activity (ParticipACTION, 2022; Prince, Roberts, Melvin, Butler, & Thompson, 2020) and tend to experience higher rates of clinical depression and anxiety (Dyer & Wade, 2012; Reisner, Katz-Wise, Gordon, Corliss, & Austin, 2016) and lower states of positive well-being compared to boys (Campbell, Bann, & Patalay, 2021). In adolescents, accruing adequate sleep and MVPA while limiting screen time and other sedentary behaviours is associated with lower severity of illness symptoms, especially feelings of depression and anxiety, and greater feelings of positive well-being (Duncan et al., 2022b; Rodriguez-Ayllon et al., 2019). Part of the mental health gender gap between boys and girls may be attributable to lower rates of …
Total citations
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