Poor cardiorespiratory fitness in first year medical students at a South African University

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Authors

Borresen, Jill
Celie, Bert
Laubscher, Ria
Bac, Martin
Wood, Paola
Camacho, Tanya Chantelle de Sousa
Nolte, Kim
Schwellnus, Marianne
Basu, Debashis
Schwellnus, Martin Peter

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Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Abstract

The personal health behaviours, including physical activity, of healthcare professionals influence their counselling practices as they relate to non-communicable diseases (NCDs). However, despite the importance of producing healthy, physically active graduates, there are limited data on the physical fitness of future healthcare professionals. This cross-sectional observational study determined the prevalence of below-average fitness in the four components of fitness in first-year university medical students. 152 participants (46 male, 106 female, 20.16 ± 2.69 years) completed cardiorespiratory fitness tests (submaximal step test), flexibility (sit-and-reach test), muscle strength (handgrip), and muscle endurance tests (sit-ups, push-ups). Sex differences were reported using one-way ANOVA or Chi square test and significance was set at p < 0.05. The prevalence (%) of below-average fitness was 69.54% for cardiorespiratory, 25.66% for handgrip strength, 65.79% for sit-ups, 23.03% for push-ups and 7.24% for flexibility. Physical fitness parameters (mean±standard deviation (SD)) were compared between sexes, where it was found that females were more flexible than males (40.61 ± 8.40 cm vs 36.70 ± 9.31 cm, p = 0.012). Males had better handgrip strength (88.96 ± 12.04 kg vs 59.34 ± 10.36 kg, p < 0.001), muscle endurance sit-ups (33.46 ± 9.04 vs 24.48 ± 12.18, p < 0.001) and push-ups (30.28 ± 13.95 vs 24.27 ± 12.35, p = 0.009). First-year medical students have poor physical fitness, notably cardiorespiratory fitness and muscle strength, which are important markers for NCD risk assessment. Tertiary institutions training healthcare professionals should consider developing interventions to improve students’ physical fitness thereby influencing their health, wellbeing, academic performance and future counselling practices.

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Keywords

Non-communicable diseases (NCDs), Health behavior, Physical activity, Aerobic, Strengths, Flexibility, SDG-03: Good health and well-being

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-03:Good heatlh and well-being

Citation

Jill Borresen, Bert Celie, Ria Laubscher, Martin Bac, Paola Wood, Tanya Camacho, Kim Nolte, Marianne Schwellnus, Debashis Basu & Martin Schwellnus (2024): Poor cardiorespiratory fitness in first year medical students at a South African University, International Journal of Health Promotion and Education, 62:5, 458-470, DOI: 10.1080/14635240.2023.2261930.