# Physical activity partially mediating the social gradient in adolescent mental health

**Authors:** Johan Dahlstrand, Qinyun Lin, Peter Friberg, Jonatan Fridolfsson, Yun Chen

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1622080 · 2025-10-13

## TL;DR

This study finds that higher socioeconomic status is linked to better adolescent mental health, and that physical activity partly explains this link, especially for girls.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that out-of-school physical activity partially mediates socioeconomic gradients in adolescent mental health, with notable effects among females.

## Key findings

- Out-of-school vigorous physical activity (VPA) and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) partially mediate the association between income and mental health problems.
- Mediation effects are stronger for father’s and mother’s education, particularly among female adolescents.
- VPA and MVPA explain a larger proportion of the association with mental health symptoms for mother’s education in female subgroups.

## Abstract

To examine whether there is a socioeconomic status (SES) gradient in adolescent mental health problems, and if so, whether out-of-school physical activity mediates this gradient.

Based on data from 1,285 adolescents in Sweden, we used linear regression analysis to examine whether the social gradient in mental health problems (stress and psychosomatic symptoms by survey) varied by SES indicators, including income, father’s and mother’s education (register data). Parameter estimates were obtained using ordinary least squares. We also investigated if out-of-school physical activity (accelerometer data) mediates these gradients by applying the potential outcomes framework for mediation analysis. This framework accounts for potential exposure-mediator interaction, and confidence intervals were calculated using bootstrapping.

Gradients in adolescents’ mental health problems were observed for all SES indicators, the coefficient of determination R2 showing the different SES indicators explained between 0.7–1.4% of stress and 0.5–1.2% of psychosomatic symptoms. Out-of-school vigorous-physical-activity (VPA) and moderate-to-vigorous-physical-activity (MVPA) partially mediated the gradients related to income in the overall sample. Specifically, VPA mediated 6.8% of the association between income and stress, and 9.2% of the association between income and psychosomatic symptoms, while MVPA mediated 5.4 and 6.6% of these associations, respectively. Regarding father’s education, VPA mediated 15.7% of the association with stress and 10.2% with psychosomatic symptoms, whereas MVPA mediated 14.6 and 8.9%, respectively. Sex-stratified analyses revealed that these mediation effects were statistically significant only among females. For mother’s education, mediation effects were observed exclusively in the female subgroup. VPA mediated 24.1% of the association with stress and 24.0% with psychosomatic symptoms, while MVPA mediated 20.8 and 21.5% of these associations, respectively.

There are social gradients in adolescents’ mental health problems based on income and parents’ education, and these gradients appear to be partially mediated via out-of-school VPA and MVPA, predominantly among females.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** mental health (OMIM:603663), mental health problems (MESH:D000076082), psychosomatic symptoms (MESH:D011602)

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12554433/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12554433