Public Health Research (Feb 2024)

The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the physical activity environment in English primary schools: a multi-perspective qualitative analysis

  • Danielle House,
  • Robert Walker,
  • Ruth Salway,
  • Lydia Emm-Collison,
  • Katie Breheny,
  • Kate Sansum,
  • Sarah Churchward,
  • Joanna G Williams,
  • Frank de Vocht,
  • Russell Jago

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3310/KLML4701

Abstract

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Background The COVID-19 lockdowns and social distancing measures, including school closures, had a major impact on children’s physical activity in England, with data showing an initial reduction in activity in the short-term post-lockdown phase of the pandemic followed by a recovery on average in the medium-term post-lockdown period. The school environment is an important context for child physical activity. The purpose of this study is to understand the changes that took place to school physical activity environments once schools reopened after lockdowns. This information will improve understanding of why changes to children’s physical activity have occurred over the course of the pandemic and the implications for future promotion of physical activity in schools. Methods Interviews with parents (n = 43), school staff (n = 18) and focus groups with 10- to 11-year-old children (participant n = 92) were conducted at two time points: between September–December 2021 and February–July 2022. Interview and focus group guides covered the impact of the pandemic on child physical activity and changes to this over time. The framework method was used for analysis. Results Three themes and three subthemes were generated: (1) the return to school; (2) over-pressured staff and environment and (3) the uneven impact of the pandemic. Theme 3 consists of three subthemes: (a) retained pandemic policies, (b) impact on physical activity culture and (c) different children need different things. Limitations and future work Conducting this research in schools during ongoing COVID-19 disruptions was a challenge and may have limited school and participant participation, particularly school staff. The parent interview sample is predominantly female, active and of higher socioeconomic status, so the experiences of male, less active and lower socioeconomic parents are limited. This study suggests that the impact of COVID-19 on child physical activity is uneven, affecting some children more than others. Future work is therefore needed to explore the details of this potential diverging experience. Conclusion The COVID-19 pandemic, school closures and post-lockdown school policies have impacted upon primary school physical activity environments. The post-lockdown school environment is highly pressured, impacting the extent to which schools can support and encourage child physical activity. Future research is needed to further explore the impact of post-lockdown changes on physical activity environments in schools, particularly over the longer term, as schools continue to adapt post lockdowns. Strategies required to support school physical activity environments must be context specific and sensitive to these changes, pressures and needs. Funding This article presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Public Health Research programme as award number NIHR131847. Plain language summary Why did we do this study? Schools are important spaces for children’s physical activity. Children can be active in physical education lessons, break times, after-school clubs and travelling to school. School closures and other COVID-19 restrictions affected children’s physical activity. We wanted to know how physical activity in primary schools might have changed since the pandemic. What did we do? We spoke to school staff, pupils and parents two times after schools reopened. We asked about children’s physical activity, and if or how this had changed over the course of the pandemic. We asked school staff about school policies around physical activity. What did we find? When children went back to school, schools needed a ‘recovery’ approach. Children’s academic, social and physical skills had been affected. For this time schools prioritised physical activity, but this was short-lived. Since then, schools have been highly pressured. They have had to ‘catch up’ on missed learning, staff are overloaded and some pupils are still affected by the lockdowns. Physical activity policies in schools have changed, but in many different ways. Some have kept social distancing policies; others feel their school culture has changed. Additionally, pupil ability and needs are more polarised. These factors have shaped, but are also shaped by, the high pressure in schools. What does this mean for children’s physical activity? Supporting changing child needs in highly pressured schools is hard for state primary schools. Changes to school physical activity policies need to be understood and evaluated. Strategies to ease pressure in schools are needed to support physical activity.