Abstract

Despite releases of governmental guidelines for promoting physical fitness among the youth in China, the performance of college students in fitness tests has been declining over the past three decades. Obesity and physical inactivity have been proposed as two main causes. However, their relative importance for improving physical fitness remains unclear. To address this knowledge gap, we collected longitudinal data spanning four consecutive years on the physical fitness test for students from Nanjing University, China. Physical education classes of two hours per week were mandatory for the first two years. Using mixed effects models, we quantify the within-subject effects of weight, muscular endurance, sex, and mandatory physical education courses, among other variables, on physical fitness total score. We found that, in spite of the dominance of normal weight among the students, losing weight was positively associated with the total score, with significant sex differences in the associations. Compulsory exercise provided by physical education classes per week had strong positive impacts on the total score, comparable to losing weight of roughly 15–17 kg for males and 5–10 kg for females. Half sex difference in the total score was explained by male students’ poor performance in the muscular endurance represented by pull-ups. Our results suggest that college students in China should engage in physical activity of higher levels to improve their physical fitness, with a heightened awareness of extra fat under normal weight and insufficient muscular endurance.

Highlights

  • Rapid economic growth and urbanization since China’s reform and opening-up in the late1970s have induced great changes in many aspects of the society

  • Our four-year longitudinal data showed that female students enrolled at Nanjing University in the year of 2015 performed consistently better than males in terms of the total score of annual physical fitness tests, in line with our quantitative analysis where the female sex represented more than 10 score points in comparison to the male sex

  • Our study found that the physical fitness of male students from Nanjing University was lagging behind that of females, with sex-specific negative effects of weight and positive effects of height and vital capacity

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Summary

Introduction

Rapid economic growth and urbanization since China’s reform and opening-up in the late1970s have induced great changes in many aspects of the society. Despite improved nutrient supply and quality, the health-related physical fitness, usually assessed in combination of body composition, cardiorespiratory endurance, flexibility, and muscular strength and endurance, of contemporary Chinese students at the age of 7 to 22 has considerably declined compared to that in the 1980s, imposing worrying challenges to national public health [1,2]. To improve the fitness of young generations, the Chinese government proposed in 2007 that children in primary and adolescents in secondary school, commonly 7 to 18 years old, should participate in physical exercise for at least one hour per day [3]. Since 2010, likely due to this nationwide call, the physical fitness of school-aged children and adolescents has. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 9182; doi:10.3390/ijerph17249182 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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