| Literature DB >> 27293769 |
James Jay Dawes1, Robin Marc Orr2, Claire Louise Siekaniec1, Andrea Annie Vanderwoude3, Rodney Pope2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Police officers are often required to undertake physically demanding tasks, like lifting, dragging and pursuing a suspect. Therefore, physical performance is a key requirement.Entities:
Keywords: Body fat; Fitness; Police; Strength; Tactical
Year: 2016 PMID: 27293769 PMCID: PMC4901472 DOI: 10.1186/s40557-016-0112-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Occup Environ Med ISSN: 2052-4374
Descriptive information for full-time officers as a cohort and by %BF groupings
| Measure | Cohort Mean ± SD | ‘Average’ and below groupb Mean ± SD | ‘Above average’ groupb Mean ± SD |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| |
| Weight (kg) | 84.45 ± 12.80 | 82.82 ± 13.40 | 85.58 ± 12.40 |
| Chest skinfold (mm) | 13.74 ± 5.52 | 8.77 ± 3.54 | 17.16 ± 3.77a |
| Abdominal skinfold (mm) | 24.57 ± 8.85 | 17.74 ± 6.52 | 29.27 ± 7.00a |
| Thigh skinfold (mm) | 12.72 ± 4.99 | 10.19 ± 3.26 | 14.47 ± 5.25a |
| Sum of skinfolds (mm) | 51.01 ± 14.56 | 36.71 ± 9.03 | 60.87 ± 7.88a |
| Estimated body fat (%) | 16.89 ± 4.60 | 12.40 ± 3.21 | 19.98 ± 2.25a |
| Estimated lean mass (kg) | 70.21 ± 11.45 | 72.71 ± 12.82 | 68.48 ± 10.20 |
| Estimated fat mass (kg) | 14.24 ± 4.50 | 10.11 ± 2.66 | 17.09 ± 3.06a |
| Push-ups (reps) | 55.58 ± 17.35 | 64.39 ± 16.39 | 49.51 ± 15.43a |
| Sit-ups (reps) | 41.05 ± 6.96 | 43.51 ± 6.34 | 39.32 ± 6.92 |
| Vertical jump height (cm) | 61.26 ± 7.96 | 65.75 ± 7.55 | 58.17 ± 6.71a |
| Estimated peak power (w) | 5478.38 ± 829.96 | 5661.33 ± 828.93 | 5352.34 ± 815.99 |
| Bench press (kg) | 93.79 ± 25.91 | 102.21 ± 27.16 | 88.00 ± 23.60 |
| Bench press ratio (BPR) | 1.10 ± 0.23 | 1.22 ± 0.23 | 1.02 ± 0.18a |
| 300 m (secs) | 56.03 ± 10.67 | 52.96 ± 6.26 | 58.15 ± 12.49 |
| 1.5 mile run (min:secs) | 12.75 ± 2.30 | 11.86 ± 1.47 | 13.37 ± 2.57 |
| Estimated VO2 max (ml.kg.min.-1) | 41.31 ± 6.50 | 43.96 ± 4.36 | 39.49 ± 7.12 |
aSignificant difference between groups, with p < .001
bGroups: i) ‘Average and below’ included participants with a %BF of 15.0 % and below for males up to the age of 30 years of age, and 17.0 % and below for males up to 50 years of age, and ii) ‘Above average’ included participants with a %BF above 15.0 % for males up to the age of 30 years of age, and above 17.0 % for males up to 50 years of age [8]
ANCOVA results between groups with age as the covariate
| Age | %BF groups | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Measure |
|
|
| 76 | Push-ups (reps) |
|
|
| 76 | Sit-ups (reps) |
|
|
| 76 | Vertical jump height (cm) |
|
|
| 76 | Estimated peak power (w) |
|
|
| 76 | Bench press (kg) |
|
|
| 76 | Bench press ratio (BPR) |
|
|
| 75 | 300 m (secs) |
|
|
| 76 | 1.5 mile run (min:secs) |
|
|
| 76 | Estimated VO2max (ml.kg.min.-1) |
|
|
%BF Percentage Body Fat
asignificant difference at p < .001
Correlations between anthropometric measures and fitness scores
| Fitness and anthropometric information | %BF | LM (kg) | FM (kg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Push-ups (reps) | −.413a | .444a | −.210 |
| Sit-ups (reps) | −.198 | −.177 | −.308 |
| Vertical jump height (cm) | −.566a | .391a | −.369a |
| Estimated peak power (w) | −.343 | .879a | .107 |
| Bench press (kg) | −.327 | .781a | .073 |
| Bench press ratio (BPR) | −.448a | .392a | −.241 |
| 300 m (secs) | .244 | .049 | .290 |
| 1.5 mile run (min:secs) | .285 | .181 | .399a |
| Estimated VO2 Max.(ml.kg.min.-1) | −.287 | −.214 | −.419a |
%BF Percentage Body Fat, LM Lean Mass, FM Fat Mass
aCorrelation is significant with p ≤ .001