Format
Book
Publication Date
Published by / Citation
Prevention Plus Wellness, LLC
Original Language

English

Country
United States
Keywords
youth
young adults
substance use prevention
mental health
illicit drug use
alcohol
tobacco
physical activity
Sports
exercise

Physical Activity’s Role in Youth Substance Use and Mental Health

Introduction

The US Department of Health and Human Services has recommended youth ages 6-17 years old get 60 minutes or more of combined moderate and vigorous physical activity each day.

Physical activity, including playing sports, is critical to both physical and brain development and health of children and adolescents, and long-term helps prevent chronic disease like obesity, heart disease and type 2 diabetes in adulthood (https://www.hhs.gov/fitness/be-active/physical-activity-guidelines-for-americans/index.html).

The content for this article was drawn from a webinar provided by Prevention Plus Wellness, LLC earlier in November 2019.  A link to the recorded webinar is provided at the end of this article.

The objectives of this article are twofold:

  1. Explore research assessing physical activity, exercise and sport on later substance use and mental health of youth and young adults, and
  2. Examine evidence-based physical activity interventions for influencing youth substance use and mental health.

Physical Activity & Youth Substance Use Research

A review of published longitudinal and intervention research, and research reviews, examining physical activity and youth substance use produced the following three findings.     

First, physical activity and sports are associated with less tobacco and illicit drug use among youth over time.  Research supporting this conclusion included a:

Second, physical activity and sports are associated with increased alcohol and binge drinking and maybe cannabis use, particularly among youth in some competitive sports.  This conclusion was supported by three publications including a:

Third, school-based multiple risk behavior interventions, even a single session, showed reductions in alcohol, tobacco and illicit drug use among youth.  Research supporting this finding was a:

Evidence-based Substance Use Prevention and Physical Activity Interventions

To identify evidence-based interventions that integrate substance use with physical activity for youth the Results First Clearinghouse Database was searched (10/2019)( https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/data-visualizations/2015/results-first-clearinghouse-database).

Results First Clearinghouse, by the Pew Charitable Trust and John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, was selected as it is a meta-database of nine evidence-based program registries.

A search of evidence-based programs was conducted using the terms “physical activity”, “sport” and “exercise” as descriptors within the substance use program category and focusing on programs that included youth or young adults.

The key findings from this search included:

  1. Most evidence-based substance use prevention programs that address physical activity (n=5) targeted and influenced multiple health behaviors.  These included two single-session programs (SPORT Prevention Plus Wellness and InShape Prevention Plus Wellness), two programs targeting high school athletes (ATLAS and ATHENA), and one health education curriculum (Michigan Model for Health).
  2. Four evidence-based programs were designed for outdoors settings.  Two were created primarily for American Indians (The Hero Project: Cultural/Adventure Rites of Passage and Project Venture).  The other two targeted youth offenders (Wilderness Challenge Programs and Behavior Management through Adventure).
  3. Only one evidence-based substance use plus fitness program was found for use in elementary schools (Playworks Coach), physical education (New Moves) and smoking cessation (Commit to Quit).  In addition, sports interventions for juvenile delinquency were found to have no effect on crime reduction.

Physical Activity & Youth Mental Health Research

A review of published longitudinal and intervention research, and research reviews, examining physical activity and youth mental health yielded the following three findings. 

First, physical activity is associated with less mental health disorders and stress and greater cognitive health.  Research supporting this finding included a:

Second, certain organized sports may increase risk of alcohol use disorder, bulimia and social and emotional disorders.  Research supporting this conclusion included the:

  • 2018 national study of 13-18 year old youth in the Journal of Adolescent Health showing vigorous physical several times a week, particularly associated with organized sports, was associated with greater odds of lifetime alcohol use disorder, bulimia, general anxiety disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder (https://www.jahonline.org/article/S1054-139X(18)30217-9/fulltext)
  • 2017 longitudinal study of Australian adolescents in Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise showing bidirectional relations between time in sport and social and emotional problems (https://europepmc.org/abstract/med/27801745)

Third, physical activity may promote mental health among youth populations suffering from certain mental problems.  In particular, aerobic physical activity interventions may reduce ADHD symptoms among young children and team sports are associated with better mental health among youth later in life who were exposed to adverse childhood experiences.  These studies included a:

Evidence-based Mental Health and Physical Activity Interventions

To identify evidence-based interventions that integrate mental health with physical activity for youth the Results First Clearinghouse Database was searched (10/2019)( https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/data-visualizations/2015/results-first-clearinghouse-database).

As mentioned earlier, the Results First Clearinghouse was selected as it is a meta-database of nine evidence-based program registries.

A search of evidence-based programs was conducted using the terms “physical activity”, “sport” and “exercise” as descriptors within the mental health program category and focusing on programs that included youth or young adults.

The key findings from this search included:

  1. Seven evidence-based mental health programs were identified that addressed physical activity, sport or exercise.
  2. Of these, two were multi-strategy interventions targeting children or adolescents with ADHD (Children’s Summer Treatment and Challenging Horizons).
  3. Two other combined mental health and physical activity evidence-based interventions for young and older adults included a multi-health intervention for those with serious mental illness (Solutions for Wellness).  The other was a computer-based program for those not using stress management (Transtheoretical Model-Based Stress Management).
  4. Support was also found for Extracurricular Activities for Social Engagement among school-aged youth and Community Fitness Programs for promoting mental health.

Conclusions

The following conclusions can be drawn from the research and evidence-based programs reviewed linking physical activity and substance use and mental health among youth and young adults.

  1. Research shows that physical activity and sports may prevent tobacco and illicit drug use, but increase alcohol, binge drinking and maybe cannabis use, particularly for youth participating in some competitive sports.
  2. School based multiple risk behavior interventions, including those just a single-session in length, may reduce alcohol, tobacco and illicit drug use among youth.
  3. Most evidence-based substance use prevention programs that included physical activity addressed multiple youth health risks or outdoors strategies.
  4. Research indicates that physical activity is associated with less mental health disorders and stress and greater cognitive health, but participation in certain organized sports is associated with an increased risk for alcohol use disorder, bulimia and social and emotional disorders.
  5. Physical activity or team sports may promote mental health among youth populations suffering from certain mental health problems like ADHS and youth exposed to adverse childhood experiences.
  6. Two evidence-based mental health programs that addressed physical activity targeted children and adolescents with ADHD, while two others were broad-based strategies, including extracurricular activities for school-aged youth and community fitness programs.

Resources

Physical Activity Interventions Impacting Youth Substance Use & Mental Health (Webinar)(Prevention Plus Wellness, LLC, 2019): https://youtu.be/4tw-cD3nwCI

Coach’s Playbook Against Drugs (US Department of Justice): https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles/173393.pdf

Using Sport for Drug Abuse Prevention (United Nations Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention, 2002): https://www.unodc.org/pdf/youthnet/handbook_sport_english.pdf

Youth Sport Programs that Address Substance Use-An Environmental Scan (Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse, 2016): https://www.ccsa.ca/youth-sport-programs-address-substance-use-environmental-scan