Association between exercise variables and Subjective Well-being

Mini-Oral Presentation C2.3

Authors

  • Susannah L. Reiner Rocky Mountain University of Heath Professions; Saint Peter's University
  • Michelle L. D'Abundo Seton Hall University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14288/hfjc.v14i3.754

Keywords:

Physical Activity, Health, Well-Being, Exercise Variables, Sleep

Abstract

Background: Understanding how exercise is related to well-being can inform health promotion practices for student-athletes. Purpose: To study the relationship between different exercise variables (frequency, intensity, and duration) and well-being (fatigue, mood, sleep quality, muscle soreness, and stress). Methods: A total of 237 student-athletes completed a 26-item survey. Well-being was assessed using a 5-question Likert questionnaire rating fatigue from “very fresh”(5) to “always tired”(1), sleep quality as “very restful”(5) to “insomnia”(1), general muscle soreness as “feeling great”(5) to “very sore”(1), stress levels as “very relaxed”(5) to “highly stressed”(1), and mood as “very positive mood”(5) to “highly annoyed/irritable/down”(1). Exercise variables were assessed using average frequency (ranging 0-7 days), duration (open-ended response), and intensity (utilizing the category ratio ratings of perceived exertion scale). Data was collected from May 29th-July 5th, 2020. A Spearman Correlation analysis was conducted for all scale and ordinal data. Results: Frequency of exercise (sessions per week) had a significant positive correlation with improved feelings of fatigue, sleep quality, and mood. Increased duration of exercise sessions was positively correlated with improved feelings of fatigue, stress, and mood. Increased session intensity was significantly correlated with improved general soreness, and mood. The interaction between domains of well-being indicated a significant relationship between fatigue and sleep quality, stress, and mood, with moderate effect sizes. Improved sleep quality was correlated with improved stress and mood with moderate effect sizes. Conclusions: The findings that exercise variables had a significant relationship to well-being domains can be used to design interventions for student-athletes

Published

2021-09-30

How to Cite

Reiner, S., & D’Abundo, M. (2021). Association between exercise variables and Subjective Well-being: Mini-Oral Presentation C2.3. The Health & Fitness Journal of Canada, 14(3). https://doi.org/10.14288/hfjc.v14i3.754