Age distributions in Paralympic Games Paris 2024: an analysis of 5,540 para athletes across 13 individual disciplines
Rafael Lima Kons, Gennaro Apollaro, Rachel Bevins, José Morales, Vinicius de Oliveira Gulias, Sidney Grosprêtre, Kevin De Pauw, Bart Roelands

TL;DR
This study analyzed the age distributions of 5,540 Paralympic athletes across 13 sports in Paris 2024, finding significant differences in median age by discipline and sex.
Contribution
The study provides novel insights by analyzing age patterns across multiple Paralympic disciplines and athlete profiles.
Findings
Para Equestrian, Para Archery, and Para Powerlifting had the highest median ages (38, 37, and 36 years respectively).
Male athletes had a higher median age (30 years) compared to female athletes (28 years).
No significant age difference was found between medallists and non-medallists.
Abstract
This study aimed to quantify the age distributions of Para athletes competing in the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games across 13 individual disciplines. A total of 5,540 athletes (52.2% male, 47.8% female) participated, with ages calculated at competition. The analysis examined differences by discipline, sex, and competitive achievement (medallist vs. non-medallist). The statistical analyses included the Kruskal–Wallis test followed by Mann–Whitney U post-hoc tests to detect differences across disciplines, while Mann–Whitney U and chi-square tests were used to analyze sex and competitive achievement at the level of 5%. The results revealed significant variation in age across sports. Para Equestrian (38 years), Para Archery (37 years), and Para Powerlifting (36 years) exhibited the highest ages, indicating later career, while Para Swimming (25 years), Para Taekwondo (27 years), and Para…
Click any figure to enlarge with its caption.
Figure 1
Figure 2
Figure 3Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsSpinal Cord Injury Research · Sport Psychology and Performance · Sports injuries and prevention
