Adolescent sports participation and health in early adulthood: An observational study
Ajinkya H. Kokandakar, Yuzhou Lin, Steven Jin, Jordan Weiss, and Amanda R. Rabinowitz, Reuben A. Buford May, Dylan Small, Sameer, K. Deshpande

TL;DR
This observational study investigates how teenage sports participation influences health in early adulthood, finding that sports involvement correlates with better self-rated health and lower depression scores.
Contribution
It introduces a hierarchical, matched observational approach to analyze the effects of different types of sports participation on long-term health outcomes.
Findings
Sports participation in adolescence improves early-adulthood health.
Participation in collision sports has specific health benefits.
Hierarchical analysis maintains error control across exposure levels.
Abstract
We study the impact of teenage sports participation on early-adulthood health using longitudinal data from the National Study of Youth and Religion. We focus on two primary outcomes measured at ages 23--28 -- self-rated health and total score on the PHQ9 Patient Depression Questionnaire -- and control for several potential confounders related to demographics and family socioeconomic status. To probe the possibility that certain types of sports participation may have larger effects on health than others, we conduct a matched observational study at each level within a hierarchy of exposures. Our hierarchy ranges from broadly defined exposures (e.g., participation in any organized after-school activity) to narrow (e.g., participation in collision sports). We deployed an ordered testing approach that exploits the hierarchical relationships between our exposure definitions to perform our…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysical Activity and Health · Sports and Physical Education Research · Physical Education and Training Studies
