Systematic review of the relationship between 20 m shuttle run performance and health indicators among children and youth — Justin J. Lang (2017) | RDL Network
Systematic review of the relationship between 20 m shuttle run performance and health indicators among children and youth
Journal of science and medicine in sport 21(4): 383-397
Article 2017 English
Authors
JL
Justin J. Lang
KB
Kevin Belanger
VP
Veronica J. Poitras
Abstract
1 min read
Objective
This systematic review aimed to summarize research that assessed the associations between 20m shuttle run test (20mSRT) performance and indicators of physiological, psychosocial and cognitive health among school-aged children and youth.
Design
Systematic review.
Methods
Five online databases were used to identify peer-reviewed studies published from 1980 to 2016. Studies were included if they matched these criteria: population (children and youth with a mean age of 5–17 years and/or in Grades 1–12), intervention/exposure (performance on the 20mSRT), and outcomes (health indicators: adiposity, cardiometabolic biomarkers, cognition, mental health, psychosocial health, self-esteem and physical self-perception, quality of life and wellbeing, bone health, musculoskeletal fitness, motor skill development, and injuries and/or harm). Narrative syntheses were applied to describe the results. A lack of homogeneity precluded a meta-analysis approach.
Results
Overall, 142 studies that determined an association between 20mSRT performance and a health indicator were identified, representing 319,311 children and youth from 32 countries. 20mSRT performance was favourably associated with indicators of adiposity, and some indicators of cardiometabolic, cognitive, and psychosocial health in boys and girls. Fewer studies examined the relationship between 20mSRT performance and measures of quality of life/wellbeing, mental health and motor skill development, and associations were generally inconsistent. The quality of the evidence ranged from very low to moderate across health indicators.
Conclusion and Implications
These findings support the use of the 20mSRT as a holistic indicator of population health in children and youth.
Allana G. LeBlanc, John C. Spence, Valerie Carson, Sarah Connor Gorber, Carrie Dillman, Ian Janssen, Michelle E. Kho, Jodie A. Stearns, Brian W. Timmons, Mark S. Tremblay
Veronica J. Poitras, Casey Gray, Xanne Janssen, Salomé Aubert, Valerie Carson, Guy Faulkner, Gary S. Goldfield, John J. Reilly, Margaret Sampson, Mark S. Tremblay
Veronica J. Poitras, Casey Gray, Xanne Janssen, Salomé Aubert, Valerie Carson, Guy Faulkner, Gary S. Goldfield, John J. Reilly, Margaret Sampson, Mark S. Tremblay
Jean‐Philippe Chaput, Casey Gray, Veronica J. Poitras, Valerie Carson, Reut Gruber, Tim Olds, Shelly K. Weiss, Sarah Connor Gorber, Michelle E. Kho, Margaret Sampson, Kevin Belanger, Sheniz Eryuzlu, Laura Callender, Mark S. Tremblay
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.