Frontiers in Psychology (Jul 2023)

Young para-athletes display more hedonic well-being than people with disabilities not taking part in competitive sports: insights from a multi-country survey

  • Luca Puce,
  • Carlo Biz,
  • Mariachiara Cerchiaro,
  • Davide Scapinello,
  • Luca Giarrizzo,
  • Carlo Trompetto,
  • Carlo Trompetto,
  • Lucio Marinelli,
  • Lucio Marinelli,
  • Khaled Trabelsi,
  • Khaled Trabelsi,
  • Mohammad Hossein Samanipour,
  • Nicola Luigi Bragazzi,
  • Pietro Ruggieri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1176595
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Hedonic well-being relates to how individuals experience and rate their lives. People with disabilities due to their pathology may more frequently suffer from anxiety and depressive disorders than their able-bodied counterparts. Sports participation is an essential way to cope with disability. On the other hand, compared with their able-bodied peers, para-athletes undergo a unique series of stressors. Little is known in terms of hedonic well-being in this specific population. We present the results of a multi-country survey of self-perceived hedonic well-being by para-athletes of different sports disciplines and a control group (disabled individuals not playing competitive sports), using the “Psychological General Well-Being Index” (PGWBI). We included 1,208 participants, aged 17.39 years, 58.4% male, 41.6% female, and 70.3% para-athletes. Para-athletes exhibited higher well-being than disabled people, for all domains of the PGWBI scale. The nature of disability/impairment was significant, with those with acquired disability reporting lower well-being. Those taking part in wheelchair basketball, para-athletics, and para-swimming competitions had a higher likelihood of reporting well-being, whereas those engaged in wheelchair rugby exhibited lower well-being compared with controls. This large-scale investigation can enable a better understanding of the self-perceived hedonic well-being of disabled people.

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