Analyzing health inequality among adolescents in Chile: Physical activity, socioeconomics, and play environments across genders
Josivaldo de Souza-Lima, Maribel Parra-Saldías, Sandra Mahecha Matsudo, Gerson Ferrari, Andrés Godoy-Cumillaf, Claudio Farias-Valenzuela, Pedro Valdivia-Moral

TL;DR
This study explores how socioeconomic factors, gender, and physical activity affect health satisfaction among Chilean adolescents, highlighting gender-specific disparities.
Contribution
The study identifies gender-specific differences in how socioeconomic and environmental factors influence adolescent health satisfaction.
Findings
Boys reported higher electronic gaming participation compared to girls.
Perceived safety was a stronger predictor of health satisfaction for girls than for boys.
Socioeconomic and environmental factors significantly influence adolescent health satisfaction with gender-specific differences.
Abstract
This study examines the association between socioeconomic factors, gender, physical activity, and health satisfaction among Chilean adolescents. It aims to identify key disparities and their implications for public health policies. Cross-sectional study based on the third wave (2016–2019) of the international Children's Worlds survey. A total of 911 adolescents aged 12–13 years from Santiago, Chile, participated. Physical activity levels, socioeconomic indicators, and health satisfaction were assessed. Statistical analyses included t-tests, chi-square tests, ANOVA, and multiple linear regression models stratified by gender. Boys reported higher levels of electronic gaming (64.6 % vs. 35.4 %, p < 0.001), while girls engaged more in outdoor play at lower frequencies (52.8 % vs. 47.2 %, p = 0.045). Perceived safety was a stronger predictor of health satisfaction for girls (β = 0.252, p…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Health and Lifestyle Studies · Health disparities and outcomes
