TY - JOUR
T1 - The effect of school sports facilities on physical activity, health and socioeconomic status in adulthood
AU - Black, Nicole
AU - Johnston, David W.
AU - Propper, Carol
AU - Shields, Michael A.
PY - 2019/1/1
Y1 - 2019/1/1
N2 - This paper focuses on the long-term impacts of attending a high school with inadequate sports facilities. We use prospective data from the British National Child Development Study, a continuing panel of a cohort of 17,634 children born in Great Britain during a single week of March 1958. Our empirical approach exploits the educational system they were exposed to: children were sorted by educational ability at age 11, but conditional on educational ability, attended their closest school. This produces quasi-random variation in the quality of the school sports facilities across respondents. We use this variation between cohort members residing within the same local authority area, and focus on outcome measures of physical activity, health, health-related lifestyle activities, and socioeconomic status, collected at ages between 33 and 50 years. We control for any potential links between the inadequacy of sports facilities and inadequacy of other facility types, and test that allocation to school type is random with respect to pre-high school observables. We find that attending a school with inadequate sports facilities led to a statistically significant, modest decrease in the likelihood of physical activity participation during adulthood. In contrast, we find no evidence that inadequate sports facilities worsened adulthood measures of physical and mental health, lifestyle or socioeconomic status.
AB - This paper focuses on the long-term impacts of attending a high school with inadequate sports facilities. We use prospective data from the British National Child Development Study, a continuing panel of a cohort of 17,634 children born in Great Britain during a single week of March 1958. Our empirical approach exploits the educational system they were exposed to: children were sorted by educational ability at age 11, but conditional on educational ability, attended their closest school. This produces quasi-random variation in the quality of the school sports facilities across respondents. We use this variation between cohort members residing within the same local authority area, and focus on outcome measures of physical activity, health, health-related lifestyle activities, and socioeconomic status, collected at ages between 33 and 50 years. We control for any potential links between the inadequacy of sports facilities and inadequacy of other facility types, and test that allocation to school type is random with respect to pre-high school observables. We find that attending a school with inadequate sports facilities led to a statistically significant, modest decrease in the likelihood of physical activity participation during adulthood. In contrast, we find no evidence that inadequate sports facilities worsened adulthood measures of physical and mental health, lifestyle or socioeconomic status.
KW - Adult health
KW - Exercise
KW - Longitudinal
KW - Physical activity
KW - Sports facilities
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85056247984&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.10.025
DO - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.10.025
M3 - Article (Academic Journal)
C2 - 30419496
AN - SCOPUS:85056247984
SN - 0277-9536
VL - 220
SP - 120
EP - 128
JO - Social Science and Medicine
JF - Social Science and Medicine
ER -