عرض بسيط للتسجيلة

المؤلفWashif, Jad
المؤلفB. Pyne, David
المؤلفSandbakk, Oyvind
المؤلفTrabelsi, Khaled
المؤلفAziz, Abdul Rashid
المؤلفBeaven, Christopher
المؤلفKrug, Isabel
المؤلفMujika, Inigo
المؤلفAmmar, Achraf
المؤلفChaouachi, Anis
المؤلفMoussa-Chamari, Imen
المؤلفAloui, Asma
المؤلفChtourou, Hamdi
المؤلفFarooq, Abdulaziz
المؤلفHaddad, Monoem
المؤلفRomdhani, Mohamed
المؤلفSalamh, Paul
المؤلفTabben, Montassar
المؤلفWong, Del
المؤلفZerguini, Yacine
المؤلفDeLang, Matthew D.
المؤلفTaylor, Lee
المؤلفBen Saad, Helmi
المؤلفChamari, Karim
تاريخ الإتاحة2023-10-23T10:25:27Z
تاريخ النشر2022
اسم المنشورBiology of Sport
المصدرScopus
معرّف المصادر الموحدhttp://dx.doi.org/10.5114/biolsport.2022.117576
معرّف المصادر الموحدhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/48748
الملخصRamadan intermittent fasting during the COVID-19 lockdown (RIFL) may present unique demands. We investigated training practices (i.e., training load and training times) of athletes, using pre-defined survey criteria/questions, during the ‘first’ COVID-19 lockdown, comparing RIFL to lockdown-alone (LD) in Muslim athletes. Specifically, a within-subject, survey-based study saw athletes (n = 5,529; from 110 countries/territories) training practices (comparing RIFL to LD) explored by comparative variables of: sex; age; continent; athlete classification (e.g., world-class); sport classification (e.g., endurance); athlete status (e.g., professional); and level of training knowledge and beliefs/attitudes (ranked as: good/moderate/poor). During RIFL (compared to LD), athlete perceptions (ranges presented given variety of comparative variables) of their training load decreased (46–62%), were maintained (31–48%) or increased (2–13%). Decreases (≥ 5%, p < 0.05) affected more athletes aged 30–39 years than those 18–29 years (60 vs 55%); more national than international athletes (59 vs 51%); more team sports than precision sports (59 vs 46%); more North American than European athletes (62 vs 53%); more semi-professional than professional athletes (60 vs 54%); more athletes who rated their beliefs/attitudes ‘good’ compared to ‘poor’ and ‘moderate’ (61 vs 54 and 53%, respectively); and more athletes with ‘moderate’ than ‘poor’ knowledge (58 vs 53%). During RIFL, athletes had different strategies for training times, with 13–29% training twice a day (i.e., afternoon and night), 12–26% at night only, and 18–36% in the afternoon only, with ranges depending on the comparative variables. Training loads and activities were altered negatively during RIFL compared to LD. It would be prudent for decision-makers responsible for RIFL athletes to develop programs to support athletes during such challenges. © 2022 Institute of Sport. All rights reserved.
اللغةen
الناشرInstitute of Sport
الموضوعCrowdsource data
Global sports
Remote training
Training load
Training perception
Vulnerable athletes
العنوانRamadan intermittent fasting induced poorer training practices during the COVID-19 lockdown: A global cross-sectional study with 5529 athletes from 110 countries
النوعArticle
الصفحات1103-1115
رقم العدد4
رقم المجلد39


الملفات في هذه التسجيلة

الملفاتالحجمالصيغةالعرض

لا توجد ملفات لها صلة بهذه التسجيلة.

هذه التسجيلة تظهر في المجموعات التالية

عرض بسيط للتسجيلة