| Literature DB >> 28107362 |
Darryl P Leong1, Martin McKee2, Salim Yusuf1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: National sporting achievement at the Olympic Games is important for national pride and prestige, and to promote participation in sport. Summer Olympic Games medal tallies have been associated with national wealth, and also social development and healthcare expenditure. It is uncertain however, how these socioeconomic factors translate into Olympic success. The objective of this study was therefore to examine the relationship between population muscle strength and Olympic medal tallies. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28107362 PMCID: PMC5249146 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0169821
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
PURE subject characteristics stratified by country/state.
BMI = body-mass index; GDP = gross domestic product; GS = grip strength; NA = not available because dietary data have not yet been analysed; SD = standard deviation. Medal tally refers to Summer Olympic Games from 2000–16 inclusive.
| Country/ State | Population in 2012 | GDP in 2012 (millions of USD) | Medal tally | Male sex, n (%) | Median age (25th-75th percentile), years | Mean height± SD, cm | Mean BMI±SD, kg/m2 | Mean GS±SD, kg | Adjusted |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Argentina N = 7462 | 42,192,500 | 603,153 | 24 | 2875 (39) | 51 (43–59) | 164±9.5 | 29.6±6.22 | 33.0±11.3 | 32.8 (32.6–32.9) |
| BangladeshN = 2712 | 161,083,808 | 116,034 | 0 | 1232 (45) | 45 (38–52) | 156±8.4 | 21.9±4.20 | 26.2±9.62 | 26.7 (26.4–26.9) |
| Brazil N = 5575 | 199,321,400 | 2,248,781 | 73 | 2493 (45) | 52 (45–59) | 162±9.3 | 27.9±5.20 | 35.4±10.0 | 35.0 (34.8–35.2) |
| Canada N = 10,010 | 34,300,080 | 1,821,446 | 84 | 4655 (47) | 54 (46–61) | 168±9.5 | 27.7±5.76 | 35.9±12.4 | 34.2 (34.1–34.4) |
| Chile N = 3218 | 17,067,370 | 266,259 | 5 | 1114 (35) | 52 (44–60) | 158±8.8 | 29.9±5.34 | 25.9±10.9 | 28.1 (27.8–28.3) |
| China N = 46,890 | 1,343,240,000 | 8,229,491 | 379 | 19,528 (42) | 51 (43–58) | 161±8.2 | 24.6±4.03 | 31.8±10.3 | 32.1 (32.1–32.2) |
| Colombia N = 7475 | 45,239,080 | 370,328 | 21 | 2685 (36) | 50 (43–58) | 159±9.0 | 26.4±5.01 | 29.4±10.9 | 30.8 (30.6–30.9) |
| India N = 25,786 | 1,205,074,000 | 1,858,745 | 13 | 11,279 (44) | 47 (40–56) | 158±9.1 | 23.0±5.04 | 26.6±8.66 | 26.7 (26.6–26.8) |
| Iran N = 6011 | 78,868,710 | 502,729 | 32 | 2876 (48) | 47 (41–55) | 162±9.7 | 27.3±4.67 | 33.0±11.4 | 31.6 (31.4–31.8) |
| Malaysia N = 10,542 | 29,179,950 | 305,033 | 8 | 4513 (43) | 51 (44–59) | 157±8.6 | 26.6±5.18 | 26.1±9.88 | 27.1 (26.9–27.3) |
| Pakistan N = 1824 | 190,291,100 | 224,880 | 0 | 896 (49) | 45 (40–53) | 161±9.1 | 24.0±5.82 | 20.0±10.1 | 18.2 (17.8–18.6) |
| Palestine N = 1561 | 4,047,000 | 11,279 | 0 | 781 (50) | 48 (41–56) | 164±9.8 | 30.3±6.32 | 33.4±10.7 | 31.5 (31.1–31.8) |
| Philippines N = 4659 | 103,775,000 | 250,182 | 1 | 1346 (29) | 53 (45–60) | 156±7.9 | 24.2±4.61 | 25.1±8.26 | NA |
| Poland N = 2020 | 38,415,280 | 490,213 | 55 | 754 (37) | 55 (48–61) | 165±8.9 | 28.1±5.08 | 35.8±12.4 | 36.0 (35.7–36.3) |
| Saudi Arabia N = 2046 | 26,534,500 | 733.956 | 3 | 1165 (57) | 45 (39–52) | 164±8.9 | 30.7±5.98 | 30.7±10.9 | 27.6 (27.2–27.8) |
| South Africa N = 3238 | 48,810,430 | 382,338 | 28 | 1030 (32) | 49 (42–57) | 160±8.2 | 27.0±8.41 | 24.5±12.6 | 25.9 (25.6–26.1) |
| Sweden N = 4097 | 9,103,788 | 523,941 | 43 | 1932 (47) | 53 (46–60) | 172±9.3 | 26.5±4.18 | 39.0±12.2 | 36.0 (35.8–36.3) |
| Turkey N = 4058 | 79,749,460 | 788,863 | 37 | 1600 (39) | 49 (43–57) | 161±9.2 | 30.5±6.02 | 30.6±10.6 | 30.8 (30.6–31.0) |
| UAE N = 914 | 5,314,317 | 383,799 | 2 | 262 (29) | 48 (40–57) | 160±8.8 | 30.2±6.40 | 27.6±9.23 | 28.7 (28.2–29.2) |
| Zimbabwe N = 815 | 12,619,600 | 12,472 | 7 | 230 (28) | 52 (45–60) | 162±7.8 | 24.6±6.09 | 30.1±8.19 | 31.5 (31.0–32.0) |
* Adjusted for age, sex, height, and daily caloric intake.
Poisson regression models for the association between grip strength, and national Olympic per capita medal tally.
Abbreviations as per Table 1.
| Model | Percent increase in expected medal count (95% confidence interval) per 1kg increase in GS | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| Unadjusted | 31 (13–51) | <0.001 |
| Adjusted for national GDP | 29 (13–48) | <0.001 |
| Adjusted for age, sex, height, and daily caloric intake | 38 (13–69) | 0.002 |
| Adjusted for age, sex, height, daily caloric intake and national GDP | 36 (13–65) | 0.001 |
Fig 1Scatter plots depicting the relationship between mean national grip strength.
The relationship between mean national grip strength and national GDP, and the natural logarithm of the per capita medal tally: (A)–unadjusted, and (B)–adjusted for age, sex, height, dietary caloric intake and national GDP), and the natural logarithm of the per capita medal tally. Countries that did not win any summer Olympic medals from 2000–16 cannot be represented.