Relationship among sociodemographic and sport variables, exercise dependence, and burnout: a preliminary study in athletes.

The aim of the study was to determine the prevalence of exer-cise dependence and athlete burnout and their relationship between them and among demographic and sport characteristics in a sample of 449 Span-ish athletes, 320 males and 129 females (Age: M = 19.71; SD = 6.62). All of them replied the Sp...

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Bibliographic Details
Authors: De Francisco, Cristina, Reche García, Cristina, Martínez Rodríguez, Alejandro, Ros Martínez, Almudena
Format: article
Publication Date:2018
Country:España
Institution:Universidad Católica San Antonio de Murcia (UCAM)
Repository:RIUCAM. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad Católica San Antonio de Murcia
OAI Identifier:oai:repositorio.ucam.edu:10952/7233
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10952/7233
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:Dependence
Burnout
Athletes
Prevalence
Sociodemographic and sport variables
Description
Summary:The aim of the study was to determine the prevalence of exer-cise dependence and athlete burnout and their relationship between them and among demographic and sport characteristics in a sample of 449 Span-ish athletes, 320 males and 129 females (Age: M = 19.71; SD = 6.62). All of them replied the Spanish versions of Exercise Dependence Scale-Revised and reduced version of Athlete Burnout Questionnaire. Results of prevalence showed a risk of exercise dependence in 8.7% of the athletes, with statistically significant differences in age (greater exercise dependence was found in athletes under the age of 18 years old), not in gender, sport dedication and type of sport. Regarding burnout, measured through its three dimensions, the data of prevalence showed 4% for emotion-al/physical exhaustion and 4.9% for sport devaluation and reduced sense of accomplishment. Men and team-sport athletes showed a greater re-duced sense of accomplishment. Men and athletes over the age of 18 also showed more sport devaluation. As for sport dedication, participants who spent less time training had higher levels of reduced sense of accomplish-ment, whereas those who dedicated more time had higher levels of emo-tional/physical exhaustion. Finally, the relationship between exercise de-pendence and burnout showed that all dimensions of burnout correlated positively with exercise dependence.