The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the physical activity environment in English primary schools: a multi-perspective qualitative analysis.

Danielle House, Robert Walker, Ruth Salway, Lydia Emm-Collison, Katie Breheny, Kate Sansum, Sarah Churchward, Joanna G Williams, Frank de Vocht, Russell Jago
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Abstract

Background: The COVID-19 lockdowns and social distancing measures, including school closures, had a major impact on children's physical activity in England, with data showing an initial reduction in activity in the short-term post-lockdown phase of the pandemic followed by a recovery on average in the medium-term post-lockdown period. The school environment is an important context for child physical activity. The purpose of this study is to understand the changes that took place to school physical activity environments once schools reopened after lockdowns. This information will improve understanding of why changes to children's physical activity have occurred over the course of the pandemic and the implications for future promotion of physical activity in schools.

Methods: Interviews with parents (n = 43), school staff (n = 18) and focus groups with 10- to 11-year-old children (participant n = 92) were conducted at two time points: between September-December 2021 and February-July 2022. Interview and focus group guides covered the impact of the pandemic on child physical activity and changes to this over time. The framework method was used for analysis.

Results: Three themes and three subthemes were generated: (1) the return to school; (2) over-pressured staff and environment and (3) the uneven impact of the pandemic. Theme 3 consists of three subthemes: (a) retained pandemic policies, (b) impact on physical activity culture and (c) different children need different things.

Limitations and future work: Conducting this research in schools during ongoing COVID-19 disruptions was a challenge and may have limited school and participant participation, particularly school staff. The parent interview sample is predominantly female, active and of higher socioeconomic status, so the experiences of male, less active and lower socioeconomic parents are limited. This study suggests that the impact of COVID-19 on child physical activity is uneven, affecting some children more than others. Future work is therefore needed to explore the details of this potential diverging experience.

Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic, school closures and post-lockdown school policies have impacted upon primary school physical activity environments. The post-lockdown school environment is highly pressured, impacting the extent to which schools can support and encourage child physical activity. Future research is needed to further explore the impact of post-lockdown changes on physical activity environments in schools, particularly over the longer term, as schools continue to adapt post lockdowns. Strategies required to support school physical activity environments must be context specific and sensitive to these changes, pressures and needs.

Funding: This article presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Public Health Research programme as award number NIHR131847.

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COVID-19 大流行对英国小学体育活动环境的影响:多视角定性分析。
背景:COVID-19 封锁和社会疏远措施(包括学校关闭)对英格兰儿童的体育活动产生了重大影响,数据显示,在大流行病封锁后的短期阶段,儿童的体育活动最初有所减少,但在封锁后的中期阶段,儿童的体育活动平均有所恢复。学校环境是儿童体育活动的重要环境。本研究的目的是了解封锁后学校重新开放后,学校体育活动环境发生了哪些变化。这些信息将有助于人们更好地理解儿童体育活动在大流行病期间发生变化的原因,以及对未来在学校推广体育活动的影响:在 2021 年 9 月至 12 月和 2022 年 2 月至 7 月这两个时间点对家长(人数 = 43)、学校教职员工(人数 = 18)进行了访谈,并对 10 至 11 岁的儿童(参与者人数 = 92)进行了焦点小组讨论。访谈和焦点小组指南涵盖了大流行病对儿童体育活动的影响以及随着时间推移的变化。采用框架法进行分析:产生了三个主题和三个次主题:(1) 重返校园;(2) 工作人员和环境压力过大;(3) 大流行病的影响不均衡。主题 3 包括三个次主题:(a) 保留的大流行病政策;(b) 对体育活动文化的影响;(c) 不同的儿童需要不同的东西:在 COVID-19 发生期间,在学校开展这项研究是一项挑战,可能会限制学校和参与者(尤其是学校教职员工)的参与。家长访谈样本主要是女性、活跃的家长和社会经济地位较高的家长,因此男性、不太活跃的家长和社会经济地位较低的家长的经验有限。本研究表明,COVID-19 对儿童体育活动的影响是不均衡的,对一些儿童的影响大于其他儿童。因此,未来的工作需要探索这种潜在的不同经验的细节:COVID-19大流行、学校关闭和关闭后的学校政策对小学体育活动环境产生了影响。停课后的学校环境压力很大,影响了学校支持和鼓励儿童体育活动的程度。未来的研究需要进一步探索学校停课后的变化对学校体育活动环境的影响,特别是在长期内,因为学校会继续适应停课后的环境。支持学校体育活动环境所需的策略必须针对具体情况,并对这些变化、压力和需求保持敏感:本文为独立研究,由美国国家健康与护理研究所(NIHR)公共卫生研究计划资助,奖励编号为NIHR131847。
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