Boys’ fitness improves over
the same age period, with 16-year-olds on average 33 per cent fitter than
12-year-olds, according to the challenge taken by 148 schools.
“The fact that girls are not
showing the same improvement in cardiovascular fitness as boys is clearly a
cause for concern,” said Prof Niall Moyna of DCU’s school of health and human
performance, who set up the challenge four years ago.
Related research into
children with low levels of fitness has found evidence of heart disease in the
arteries of 15-year-olds, he said. The same children were also found to have
high cholesterol, blood pressure and fat levels.
Both
boys and girls improved their performance after undertaking a six-week fitness
programme that forms part of the challenge, which was taken by more than 10,000
children this year.
The average
improvement for boys was 12 per cent while for girls, coming from a lower base,
it was 19 per cent.
Prof Moyna says
a variety of social and cultural reasons may explain young girls’ poor fitness
levels.
“There are
issues around the continuing participation of girls in sport as they grow
older. They may become unused to pushing themselves, to being out of breath,
even to the fact their make-up could run.”
However, he is optimistic about the future because of a
“paradigm shift” in recent years which has made it more acceptable for girls to
continue in sport, as well as an increase in team sport options.
While Irish boys and girls are
well above the European average for fitness for their age group, this is not
regarded as an accurate guide to the minimum fitness level required for optimal
health, according to Prof Moyna.
The European figures are a
“race to the bottom” in terms of performance and Ireland should develop its own
national norms, he maintains.
“Lifestyle behaviours tend to track from childhood to
adulthood. Children who are unfit and overweight in their teenage years will
likely be unfit and overweight as adults.”
Taoiseach Enda Kenny will today present prizes to the
most improved schools in the challenge, which is sponsored by Aviva Health. : The Schools' Fitness Challenge
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