性別平等が身体能力と公衆衛生に与える影響(Gender equality universally linked to physical capacity)

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2025-10-23 カロリンスカ研究所

カロリンスカ研究所と上海体育大学の国際共同研究によると、若年成人の体力(心肺持久力:VO₂peak)は、国の社会経済的発展度(HDI)と男女平等指数(GII)に強く関連している。24カ国・11万9,000人超のデータを解析した結果、HDIが高い国ほど体力が高く、特に女性で顕著だった。中程度HDIの国の女性は低HDI国より平均2.7mL/kg/min高く、さらに男女平等度が高い国では、女性のVO₂peakが平均6.5mL/kg/min上昇していた。これは教育、所得、労働・健康機会の平等が運動参加や健康体力を高める要因であることを示す。研究者らは、社会構造やジェンダー格差の是正が健康寿命延伸に不可欠と強調し、低HDI国や多様な民族集団での追加研究の必要性を指摘した。成果は『Journal of Sport and Health Science』誌に掲載。

性別平等が身体能力と公衆衛生に与える影響(Gender equality universally linked to physical capacity)
Photo: Istock

<関連情報>

人間開発とジェンダー不平等は心肺機能と関連している:V̇O 2peakの世界的な系統的レビュー Human development and gender inequality are associated with cardiorespiratory fitness: A global systematic review of V̇O2peak

Nicolas J. Pillon, Joaquin Ortiz de Zevallos, Juleen R. Zierath, Barbara E. Ainsworth
Journal of Sport and Health Science  Available online 22 October 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jshs.2025.101098

Highlights

  • A global systematic review of 24 countries identifies independent associations of Human Development Index (HDI) and Gender Inequality Index (GII) with cardiorespiratory fitness across age groups and sexes.
  • Peak oxygen uptake (V̇O2peak) values are higher in countries with middle- and high-HDI compared with low-HDI settings.
  • Greater gender inequality (higher GII) is associated with lower V̇O2peak in both females and males.
  • The largest disparities in V̇O2peak were found in young women between low- and high-GII countries, indicating that improvements in human development particularly benefit young females.

Abstract

Background

Cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) is a powerful predictor of mortality and chronic disease risk, yet global patterns and determinants of CRF remain poorly defined, particularly in females and underrepresented populations. We conducted a systematic review and quantitative synthesis of directly measured peak oxygen uptake (V̇O2peak) internationally and examined its association with human development and gender inequality.

Methods

Studies were eligible if V̇O2peak was assessed via direct gas analysis during maximal exercise testing, and if the countries had scores for the Human Development Index (HDI) and Gender Inequality Index (GII). Studies were identified through MEDLINE/PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, and Web of Science. Risks of bias were assessed by an adaptation of the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. Multivariable linear regression models examined associations between V̇O2peak, age, sex, exercise modality, HDI, GII, and study year.

Results

Data included 95 studies from 24 countries with HDI and GII scores, comprising 119,435 adults (42% females) with V̇O2peak assessed via direct gas analysis during maximal exercise testing. The risk of bias was low. V̇O2peak was positively associated with HDI (β = 14.1) and negatively associated with GII (β = –3.6). Slightly stronger associations were observed in females than males (HDI: β = 18.9 vs. β = 13.9, GII: β = –4.6 vs. β = –3.6). Young females in middle-HDI countries had higher V̇O2peak than those in low-HDI countries (31.2 mL/kg/min vs. 28.5 mL/kg/min), with limited additional gains in high-HDI contexts. V̇O2peak decreased with higher gender inequality, with the largest disparities observed in young females between high- and low-GII countries (32.8 mL/kg/min vs. 26.3 mL/kg/min).

Conclusion

Global variation in CRF is tied to national levels of human development and gender equality. These findings support prioritizing structural and policy-level interventions that address social and gender disparities in physical activity access and health promotion. Studies from countries with lower HDI and information on ethnicity and socioeconomic status will bridge crucial gaps in understanding factors involved in global CRF levels.

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