| Literature DB >> 26692895 |
Heather J Clark1, Martin Camiré2, Terrance J Wade3, John Cairney4.
Abstract
This article presents the results of a scoping review of the sport literature (2000-2014) on psychological and social outcomes relevant to youth alcohol and illicit drug use. Prior reviews report that sport is related to increased alcohol use and reduced illicit drug use among youth, yet provide little guidance regarding the mechanisms that can explain this relationship. We reviewed the literature on sport participation and psychological and social outcomes to identify factors that could help explain this link. Psychological and social factors were selected as they play a paramount role in understanding youth alcohol and drug use. Fifty-nine articles were identified and included in the review. The literature generally supported connections between sport and positive psychological and social outcomes, including self-esteem, self-regulation, general life skills, and pro-social behaviour. Yet limitations in the methods and measures limit the ability to draw conclusions from the literature. In addition, the diversity of youth and sport was generally ignored in the literature. This article suggests a number of directions for future research that might improve our understanding of how sport impacts psychological and social outcomes along with alcohol and illicit drug use.Entities:
Keywords: Sport participation; alcohol use; drug use; psychological factors; social factors
Year: 2015 PMID: 26692895 PMCID: PMC4662096 DOI: 10.1080/1750984X.2015.1068829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Rev Sport Exerc Psychol ISSN: 1750-984X
Sport research with psychological and/or social outcomes.
| Author | Country | Type of study | Gender | Age | Sport | Locale | Outcome category | Main findings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Babiss and Gangwisch ( | United States | Quantitative | M&F | 12–18 | any | any | P; MH | Sport can protect against depression and suicidal ideation by boosting self-esteem and increasing social support |
| 2 | Bailey ( | United Kingdom | Lit Review | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | P; S | Physical education and sport in schools, when appropriately presented, can lead to development |
| 3 | Bailey et al. ( | United Kingdom | Lit Review | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | P; S | Physical education and school sport can lead to physical, social, affective and cognitive outcomes |
| 4 | Barber, Eccles, and Stone ( | United States | Quantitative | M&F | 16; 18; 21; 24 | ns | ns | P; S; MH | Sports participation predicted positive educational outcomes, lower social isolation but higher drinking |
| 5 | Brown and Blanton ( | United States | Quantitative | M&F | 18–24 | ns | ns | MH | Men not in sport were 2.5 times more likely to report suicidal behavior than sports participants. Women not in sport were 1.67 times the odds of reporting suicidal behavior than sports participants |
| 6 | Bruner, Hall, and Côté ( | Canada | Quantitative | M | 14–17 | basketball, running | CR | P; S | Team versus individual sports may provide different learning environments, but the development of youth is more influenced by the people involved than the sport |
| 7 | Buford-May ( | United States | Qualitative | M | ns | basketball | CR | S | Basketball players were exposed to discrimination, racism, and a win-at-all-costs attitude |
| 8 | Camiré, Trudel, and Forneris ( | Canada | Qualitative | M&F | 13–17 | basketball; volleyball; soccer; badminton | S | P; S | Students believed high school sport helped them develop leadership, time-management, goal-setting |
| 9 | Camiré and Trudel ( | Canada | Qualitative | M&F | 13–17 | basketball; volleyball; soccer; badminton | S | S | Students believe they can learn values through high school sport but also gamesmanship tactics |
| 10 | Camiré, Forneris, Trudel, and Bernard ( | Canada | Qualitative | M&F | coaches | n/a | n/a | S | Presenting 5 strategies for helping coaches facilitate positive youth development through sport |
| 11 | Camiré, Trudel, and Forneris ( | Canada | Qualitative | M&F | 13–18; coaches | ns | S | S | Coaches had strategies to foster student development and students believed they could transfer their skills |
| 12 | Camiré and Trudel ( | Canada | Qualitative | M; | 14–16; coaches | football | S | P; S | Football can help students learn important life skills and remain engaged academically |
| 13 | Camiré, Trudel, and Bernard ( | Canada | Qualitative | M | 13–17; coach; administrators | hockey | CR | S | Case study demonstrating how sport can be deliberately used to foster youth development |
| 14 | Carreres-Ponsoda, Escarti, Cortell-Tormo, Fuster-Lloret, and Andreu-Cabrera ( | Spain | Quantitative | M&F | 12–19 | any | CR | P; S | Youth in out-of-school sport have higher levels of self-efficacy, prosocial behavior and responsibility respect |
| 15 | Collins and Barber ( | United States | Quantitative | F | 13–19 | Field Hockey; elite | CR | MH | Parental expectations can influence students’ confidence and level of anxiety |
| 16 | Coalter ( | United Kingdom | Position Paper | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | S | Explore how sport-for-development organizations can contribute to certain types of social capital |
| 17 | Conroy and Coatsworth ( | United States | Position Paper | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | S | Effective coach training programs can enhance youth social development |
| 18 | Danish et al. ( | United States | Position Paper | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | P | Sport can play a role in helping youth learn life lessons but programs must be designed to do so-nonspecific life skills |
| 19 | Durlak, Weissberg, and Pachan ( | United States | Meta-Analysis | M&F | 5–18 | ns | S | P; S | Compared to controls, participants demonstrated significant increases in self-perceptions, bonding to school, positive social behaviors, school grades, reductions in problem behaviors, the formation of cliques, favoritism, and pressure |
| 20 | Eccles, Barber, Stone, and Hunt ( | United States | Quantitative | M&F | 15–16; 17–18; 21–22; 25–26 | ns | ns | S | Participation on school sports teams predicted better educational outcomes and higher rates of drinking |
| 21 | Eley and Kirk ( | United Kingdom | Quantitative | M&F | 16–19 | ns | ns | S | Study demonstrates the advantage of using sport as a means for encouraging citizenship among youth |
| 22 | Eime et al. ( | n/a | Lit Review | M&F | n/a | n/a | n/a | P; S; MH | -self-esteem, self-control; prosocial behaviour; emotional regulation; depression; anxiety; suicide ideation and behaviour; resilience |
| 23 | Fraser-Thomas et al. ( | Canada | Lit Review | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | S | Review of how youth sport programs foster positive development, while decreasing problem behaviors |
| 24 | Fraser-Thomas and Côté ( | Canada | Qualitative | M&F | 14–18 | swimming | CR | S | Sport participation can lead to numerous positive or negative outcomes for youth |
| 25 | Gore, Farrell, and Gordon ( | United States | Quantitative | M&F | 13–17 | ns-t | any | MH; S | Team sports protected against depressed mood |
| 26 | Gould, Chung, Smith, and White ( | United States | Quantitative | M&F | Coaches | ns | S | P; S | Coaches ranked students’ physical, psychological, and social development as their main coaching focus. |
| 27 | Gould and Carson ( | United States | Quantitative | M&F | 13–18 | ns | S | S | Coaching behaviors are significant predictors of developmental experiences |
| 28 | Gould, Flett, and Lauer ( | United States | Quantitative | M&F | 11–18 | ns | CR; S | P; S | The more coaches create mastery environments, the more likely positive developmental gains result |
| 29 | Gucciardi and Jones ( | Australia | Quantitative | M | 10–18 | cricket | CR | P; S; MH | Cricketers with high mental toughness reported more developmental assets and less negative emotions compared those with moderate mental toughness |
| 30 | Harrison and Narayan ( | United States | Quantitative | M&F | 13–15 | ns | S | P; S; MH | Students involved in sports had, among other things, a healthier self-image and lower emotional distress |
| 31 | Harrist and Witt ( | United States | Qualitative | F; | 12–16; coaches | basketball | S | S | Desired goals were identified in player improvement, development of life skills and enjoyment |
| 32 | Holt, Tink, Mandigo, and Fox ( | Canada | Qualitative | M | 15–18 | soccer | S | S | In a case study of one high school soccer team, athletes learned respect and initiative |
| 33 | Holt, Tamminen, Tink, and Black ( | Canada | Qualitative | M&F | university | ns | ns | S | Social interactions are central to how people learn life skills, along with parental reinforcement |
| 34 | Holt, Sehn, Spence, Newton, and Ball ( | Canada | Qualitative | M&F | 10–15; school staff | ns | S | S | Intramural sports associated with negative student interactions. PYD outcomes = empathy, social links |
| 35 | Johnston, Harwood, and Minniti ( | United Kingdom | Qualitative | ns | coaches | swimming | CR | P; S | Practitioners believe athletes should learn self-perceptions, behavioral skills, social skills, approach characteristics, and emotional competence |
| 36 | Jonker, Elferink-Genser, and Visscher ( | Netherlands | Quantitative | M&F | 12–16 | ns; elite | S; CR | S | Self-regulation may help elite youth athletes to combine a sport career with education |
| 37 | Kavussanu and Spray ( | United Kingdom | Quantitative | M | 12–17 | Soccer | CR | S | Perceived performance climate corresponded to low levels of moral functioning in football |
| 38 | Kavussanu ( | United Kingdom | Lit Review | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | S | Morally-relevant sport behaviors are significant because of their consequences on well-being |
| 39 | Kay and Bradbury ( | United Kingdom | Mixed Methods | M&F | Youth volunteers; adults | ns | CR | P; S | Strong benefits (social capital) from involvement, increased social connectedness in a range of contexts |
| 40 | Lesyk and Kornspan ( | United States | Quantitative | M&F | coaches | ns | ns | S | Coaches believed having fun, learning life skills, and being part of a team are benefits of high school sports. |
| 41 | Ley and Barrio ( | Spain | Position Paper | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | P | In psychosocial intervention, sport is powerful when combined with other movement or education methods |
| 42 | MacDonald, Côté, and Deakin ( | Canada | Quantitative | M&F | administrators; | basketball; dance; hockey; ringette; soccer; softball; volleyball | CR | P; S | Athletes who played for trained coaches reported higher rates of personal and social skills than athletes who played for untrained coaches |
| 43 | MacDonald et al. ( | Canada | Quantitative | M&F | 9–19 | ns | S; CR | S | Environments that encourage peer affiliation and personal achievement results in development of youth |
| 44 | Marsh and Kleitman ( | United States | Quantitative | M&F | 12–14 to 18–20 | ns | S; CR | P | Participation in high school sports had positive effect on many academic outcomes |
| 45 | McCarthy, Jones, and Clark-Carter ( | United Kingdom | Quantitative | M&F | 8–15 | ns | CR; S | S | Team sport reported greater competency, peer affiliations, excitement, parental involvement and enjoyment compared with individual sport. Task orientation predicted enjoyment |
| 46 | Merkel ( | United States | Lit Review | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | P; S; MH | Emphasis on fun, physical fitness, psychological well-being, and life lessons are paramount for success |
| 47 | Papacharisis, Goudas, Danish, and Theodorakis ( | Greece | Quantitative | M&F | 10–12 | volleyball (F); soccer (M) | CR | P | Experimental group had higher self-beliefs, problem solving, and positive thinking than the control group |
| 48 | Petitpas, Cornelius, Van Raalte, and Jones ( | United States | Position Paper | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | P | The components of a framework are outlined and suggestions for research and evaluation are offered |
| 49 | Rose-Krasnor, Busseri, Willoughby, and Chalmers ( | Canada | Quantitative | M&F | 10–18 | ns | S; CR | P; S; MH | Breadth and intensity were related to indicators of development. Explained major variance involvement |
| 50 | Rutten et al. ( | Netherlands | Quantitative | M&F | 12–18 | soccer; swimming | ns | S | Coaches maintain relationships with athletes reduce antisocial behavior, exposure to sociomoral reasoning in sport promotes pro-social behavior |
| 51 | Steiner, McQuivey, Pavelski, Pitts, and Kraemer ( | United States | Quantitative | M&F | 13–18 | ns | S | MH; S | Sports participation is associated with mental and physical benefits but also an increased risk of injury |
| 52 | Strachan, Côté, and Deakin ( | Canada | Qualitative | M&F | coaches | swimming; gymnastics; diving; elite | CR | S | PYD for elite youth athletes needs appropriate training environment, opportunities for skill development, and supportive interactions |
| 53 | Taliaferro, Rienzo, and Donovan ( | United States | Quantitative | M&F | 14–18 | ns | CR | S; MH | White students, sport participation related to multiple positive behaviors. African American, Hispanic showed few positive behaviors, negative behaviors |
| 54 | Vella, Oades, and Crowe ( | Australia | Qualitative | M&F | coaches | ns | CR | S | Coaches see themselves as responsible for facilitating many positive youth development outcomes |
| 55 | Vella, Oades, and Crowe ( | Australia | Quantitative | M&F | 11–18 | soccer | CR | S | Best predictor of development is a combination of transformational leadership and quality relationships |
| 56 | Voelker, Gould, and Crawford ( | United States | Qualitative | M&F | 18 | ns | S | S | Being a high school captain helps the learning of responsibility, accountability, and conflict resolution |
| 57 | Weiss, Stuntz, Bhalla, Bolter, and Price ( | United States | Qualitative | M&F | 11–17; coaches; parents | golf | CR; S | P; S | The First Tee is having a positive impact on youth development and in the transfer of life skills |
| 58 | Wilkes and Côté ( | Canada | Mixed Methods | F | 14–15; administrators | basketball | CR; S | S | School basketball participants developed initiative and social norms but also faced higher stress levels |
| 59 | Yang et al. ( | Finland | Quantitative | M&F | 9, 12, 15, 18; 36, 39, 42, 45 | ns | ns | P | Sustained involvement in sport (at least 3 years) is associated with reduced chronic job strain in adulthood |
Note: Type of sport – specific or general (any-any sport; ns-non specific; t-team); Locale – CR-community/recreational, S-school (any-any locale; ns-non specific); Outcome category: P-Psychological/Psychosocial; S-Social; MH-Mental Health (note mental health is considered under the umbrella of psychological factors)