Towards a Health Promotion for Children Engaged in Sport Intensive Practice for a Healthy Adult
Overview
- Phase
- N/A
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Prevention
- Sponsor
- Fondation Lenval
- Enrollment
- 90
- Primary Endpoint
- Determine whether a somatotype in harmony with the expectations of the discipline protects the athlete in terms of self-perceptions and, consequently, reduces risky behaviors for her health.
- Status
- Not Yet Recruiting
- Last Updated
- last year
Overview
Brief Summary
This project aims to elucidate the complexities of the preventive approach among young people involved in intensive sports activities, providing valuable recommendations to optimize their physical, mental, and social health both in the present and in the long term. The multidisciplinary skills of a team of researchers in sports science and health will contribute their recognized disciplinary expertise through international publications, as well as solid experience in the demands of elite sports, along with a commitment to transferring innovative knowledge toward a preventive approach to sports training.
The main objective is to determine whether a somatotype aligned with the discipline's expectations protects the athlete in terms of self-perception and, consequently, reduces health-risk behaviors. Secondary objectives will include linking somatotype, growth, psychological changes (self-perception), and the emergence of health-risk behaviors or injuries in these young athletes.
Investigators
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Children aged 8 to 15 years old
- •Intensive athletes: that is to say they practice a competitive sporting activity with a number of hours of weekly training greater than their age in years.(For example, a 10 year old child will need to train more than 10 hours per week to be included.)
- •Sport at an early age
- •Obtaining written and signed informed consent from one of the two parents or the holder of parental authority
- •Affiliation to a social security system
Exclusion Criteria
- •menstruation for more than a year at the time of inclusion
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Determine whether a somatotype in harmony with the expectations of the discipline protects the athlete in terms of self-perceptions and, consequently, reduces risky behaviors for her health.
Time Frame: 2 times a year for up to 84 months of follow-up
frequency of occurrence of risky behavior depending on the somatotype of the athletes
Secondary Outcomes
- 1. How does the somatotype of athletes change over time and in response to training? Are these modifications uniform among athletes of the same sex practicing the same sport?(2 times a year for up to 84 months of follow-up)