1. Introduction
Physical fitness is considered to be a key component of adolescent development and overall health, and a predictor of future health [
1,
2,
3]. Physical fitness has been divided into sport-specific and health-related physical fitness, which can be considered a multifaceted construct [
4,
5]. The latter primarily includes cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) and musculoskeletal fitness (MSF) [
6]. CRF reflects the body’s ability to transport and use oxygen for energy transfer to support muscle activity during physical activity. MSF reflects the ability of a muscle or group of muscles to exert maximum force, explosive contraction, or sustained fatigue-free contraction, and the ability to move joints through a full range of motion. Overall, health-related fitness facilitates the promotion and maintenance of health and well-being and reduces health risks due to low levels of physical activity [
7]. In particular, physical fitness is also important because the physical fitness that a person builds during adolescence has a significant impact on their physical fitness in adulthood and throughout their formative years and will continue into their later lives [
8,
9]. In addition, physical fitness has a significant impact on physical development and the maintenance of normal weight [
10]. CRF and MSF in adolescents are also significantly associated with overweight and obesity, mental health, cognitive level, academic performance, and bone health [
11,
12]. At the same time, in the context of health improvement, adolescents should focus on physical fitness [
13]. Enhancing the physical fitness of children and adolescents is an important means of enhancing health across the lifespan [
5]. Low physical fitness has also been found to be associated with many chronic diseases and medical conditions [
14]. There is a significant association between both low CRF and MSF and increased risk of obesity, self-esteem deficits, cardiometabolic disease, and all-cause mortality in early adulthood [
15,
16]. Regular physical fitness testing programs are important for initiating responses to negative trends in youth fitness. It can also be used to evaluate the implementation of current public health policies, adapt decisions to changes in the health of the population, and forecast the future burden of disease in the region [
17].
Yet, the current situation is cause for concern with an overall downward trend in adolescent physical fitness over the last few decades [
18,
19]. The aerobic capacity of adolescents worldwide has almost universally decreased, while the body mass index has increased [
20,
21]. Available data show that 74% of Czech children have “below normal” muscle fitness and less than half of US adolescents are considered to be at a healthy level of physical fitness [
22,
23]. Physical fitness development is not consistent across countries [
14]. Even different regions of the same country show physical imbalances depending on the development of natural, economic, and social determinants of health in each region. Previous studies have developed test instruments to assess the physical fitness of specific populations within individual states in the USA [
24,
25]. However, the variability and inconsistency of the data available across states are considerable, and the results suggest that it is not possible to directly compare fitness adaptations across states [
26]. China’s latest report also points out that although the physical fitness of Chinese adolescent students has shown a steady improvement over the three years 2016–2018, the development of physical fitness among adolescent students in different regions and grades in China is uneven and inadequate [
27].
Since the unevenness of physical fitness across regions involves all aspects of social development and will likely affect the evaluation of local region health indices, it is crucial to study the impact mechanisms of regional differences in physical fitness and to develop effective intervention countermeasures against low physical fitness [
28,
29]. Previous studies have elucidated the effects of socioeconomic status, family kinship, lifestyle, natural environment, and geographic location on adolescent health from a variety of perspectives, but there is a relative lack of research that explicitly uses spatial statistical analysis to explore the mechanisms influencing adolescent physical fitness. As a result, there is still insufficient progress on whether or how spatial location influences the development of adolescent physical fitness, or on spatial location-specific interventions for specific provinces to promote adolescent physical fitness. China is located in the eastern part of Asia and is a vast country, with great variation in the natural and social environments of different regions. Therefore, considering the possible spatial heterogeneity of physical fitness influencing mechanisms, it is likely that there are different combinations of influencing factors on the physical fitness status of students in different geographical locations. Compared to global regression models based on ordinary least squares (OLS), geographically weighted regression (GWR) models are more suitable for revealing health impact mechanisms and have been widely used in the field of public health [
30,
31,
32]. However, GWR models are still more limited in their scale of action, with the assumption that all spatial processes of local coefficients are at the same scale, which does not reflect well the spatial scale differences between multiple influences and can capture more noise, causing bias in the process of model construction [
33]. As an extension of the GWR framework, the MGWR model uses a different spatial smoothing determination method for each independent variable, which in turn generates a different bandwidth of variables, improving the geographically weighted regression model so that the model constructed for the sample not only observes spatial heterogeneity, but also enables the model to identify changes at different spatial scales, and is therefore gradually being applied in empirical studies of various impact mechanisms [
34,
35,
36].
In summary, to fill these gaps, this paper takes junior high school students from 31 provinces in China who participated in the 2018 China National Student Physical Fitness Survey as the research object. It also adopts the student physical fitness failure rate as an indicator to measure the low physical fitness status of adolescents in each region and constructs a multi-scale geographically weighted regression (MGWR) model including environmental factors and socio-economic factors. The results of the model are used as the basis for proposing regionalized interventions to address the low physical fitness of Chinese adolescents. This will provide a theoretical reference for the further improvement of regional scientific fitness guidance programs, the prevention and control of physical decline, and the construction of health-centered and policy-oriented urban and environmental planning. Specifically, we will address the following research questions.
Should spatial heterogeneity and spatial scale variation be considered between the current low physical fitness and the influencing factors in Chinese adolescents?
How do we regionalize low physical fitness Coping Strategies based on these possible spatially variable relationships?
The description of this paper is structured as follows. In the second section, we provide a review of the literature on physical fitness as well as spatial statistical models. In the third section, we provide details on the data sources and the chosen methods. In the fourth section, we present the main results around the spatial scale and spatial patterns of the influencing factors. In the fifth section, we discuss the results obtained and give recommendations for appropriate regionalized Coping Strategies. In the sixth section, we summarize the whole study and elaborate on the prospects and limitations.
5. Discussion
This study found that the multi-scale geographically weighted regression (MGWR) was more reliable than ordinary least squares (OLS) and geographically weighted regression (GWR) for analyzing the factors influencing the low physical fitness of Chinese adolescents, and that the MGWR not only takes into account geospatial differences, but also calculates the weights of different variables through a kernel function, which determines the spatial scale of the influencing factors. Spatial scaling effectively avoids capturing too much noise and bias in inaccurate results. Therefore, whether the spatial scale of the influencing factors is considered will have a significant impact on the results and analysis of the model. The distribution of the spatial pattern of the local R
2 shows that the introduction of spatial scaling significantly improves the model fit in some areas of China. For the western regions, especially the north-western and south-western parts of China, where the fit is weak, there are several explanations for this phenomenon: From a physical geographic point of view, the north-western and south-western regions are mostly located in highland terrain with altitudes of over 1000 m or in arid and semi-arid regions with an annual rainfall of less than 500 mm. In the south-east, most of the regions are in plains, hills, or low mountainous areas, and have abundant precipitation throughout the year. The complexity of topography and climate causes the north-west and south-west regions to be affected by a combination of various geographical environments [
83]. From the perspective of social development, the coastal areas of the south-east are well supplied with water, have excellent conditions for industrial and urban development, have a high density of transport networks, have more convenient access to the outside world, and are highly urbanized, with a stable and robust overall development structure. Northwest and Southwest regions have relatively weak population carrying capacity and non-agricultural industries [
84,
85]. The distribution of Chinese minority populations in the northwest and southwest is complex, with differences in lifestyles and regional cultures [
86,
87]. In summary, the specific situation of students’ physical fitness in the northwest and southwest regions needs to be studied in greater depth, considering the regional complexity behind the environment and socio-economic, as well as the unevenness of the indicators of physical fitness due to different geographical locations, and the addition and deletion of influencing factors according to the actual situation.
5.1. Suggestions for Regionalized Coping Strategies
5.1.1. Confronting the Differences in Adolescent Physical Fitness between Regions in China and Intervening Based on Geographic Conditions
Studies on health and climate and the natural environment have shown that health and the natural environment are inextricably linked [
88,
89]. As society develops, the natural environment is constantly changing the way humans produce and live, balancing the material and energy exchange between humans and the environment [
28]. Precipitation is a measure of climate change, and this study found that annual regional precipitation has a statistically significant effect on human physical fitness among natural environmental factors. The results of the spatial pattern of precipitation influence, combined with the regional distribution of annual precipitation in China, show that the southeastern coastal areas are the first to receive water vapor from the southeast monsoon and are already rich in precipitation. These areas are less sensitive to precipitation as an indicator, so the marginal effect is diminished. In the northwest, due to its deep inland location, distance from the sea, and low rainfall, a moderate amount of precipitation can cause strong climatic changes in the region, resulting in a change in the coefficient of influence. Thus, the spatial pattern of coefficient influence shows a development that is opposite to the pattern of precipitation in China. In addition, this study found that the average elevation of the region was a statistically significant factor in the influence of natural environmental factors in the female group, and that an increase in altitude was associated with an improvement in the physical fitness of regional females. By combining previous studies, it was found that there is a highly significant correlation between human aerobic capacity and altitude, and that appropriate altitude can effectively enhance human aerobic capacity [
90]. Children living at higher altitudes have higher lung function relative to children living at lower altitudes [
91,
92,
93]. Studies have shown that after a period of acclimatization to the plateau, students’ CRF improved significantly, and adolescents living at relatively high altitudes had better motor coordination, which also corroborates our findings that the appropriate altitude is beneficial to adolescents’ physical performance [
94,
95]. The spatial pattern of the influence of altitude may be explained by the fact that although youth physical fitness failure rates are influenced by a combination of factors, they are currently largely dependent on socio-economic development conditions. For the north-western region of China, due to the relatively weak level of economic and social development, the low physical fitness of female adolescents in the provinces is mainly influenced by the natural environment. In the eastern coastal regions, the level of urbanization is high and economic conditions are relatively good, so the influence of altitude on the failure rate of physical fitness is somewhat reduced. When comparing the gender differences in physical fitness failure rates, for female adolescents, the natural environment in which they live is more closely related to their physical health. In conclusion, it is important to address the differences in the physical fitness of young people in different regions of China due to the natural environment, and to pay more attention to the role and influence of the natural environment in promoting the physical fitness of young people. The program should be tailored to the needs of each region, such as the development of endurance sports in the plateau region, and the popularization of ice and snow sports in the northeast region.
5.1.2. Accelerating the Upgrading of Industrial Structures in the Northeast and West of China to Build a Health-Friendly Environment
The non-farm industrial structure ratio, also known as the non-farm output ratio, is calculated as the ratio of the value of production in the secondary and tertiary sectors to the gross domestic product of the region and is the main regional development characteristic variable to measure the development of the industrial structure of a region [
96]. As one of the key factors in the evaluation of social development and economic growth, industrial structure has always been highly valued by the Chinese government. According to the Petty–Clark Theorem, in the relationship between the evolution of industrial structure and economic development, the increase in the ratio of the non-farm industrial structure is an important role as the industrial structure is continuously upgraded, therefore the proportion of non-farm industrial output to regional GDP is the top priority for the upgrade of industrial structure [
97]. At present, China’s economy is growing at a medium-to-high speed, and the construction of “Healthy China” is accelerating. As an important part of the national strategy of “Healthy China”, the development of students’ physical fitness, along with the process of China’s economic development, is a topic of concern. The development of economic factors can have an impact on people’s physical fitness to some extent, and some studies have shown that a higher economy can lead to a lower prevalence of obesity, which corroborates the results we obtained [
98,
99,
100]. From the perspective of this study, the non-farm industrial structure ratio has a positive effect on promoting the physical fitness of Chinese adolescents, while the distribution of the spatial pattern of the influence of the non-farm industrial establishment ratio across gender groups shows that, firstly, the industrial structure in the western region needs to be upgraded, and the local resource as well as environmental conditions, regional location, and accessibility should be considered. Secondly, the development experience of oasis cities in western China should be taken into account, and industries should be gradually concentrated in the oasis region, which is conducive to improving technological progress and upgrading industrial structure in the western region, narrowing the difference in economic development with that of southeastern China, and promoting the physical fitness of youth [
83,
101]. Due to the high proportion of agricultural industries in the three northeastern provinces of China caused by special historical reasons, the future improvement of students’ physical fitness in this region can start with the idea of accelerating industrial restructuring in order to stimulate regional economic and social development and cultivate a healthy environment adapted to the development of students’ physical fitness. The eastern region of China should maintain an open economy and make full use of the resource conditions of the domestic and international markets to continue to upgrade and transform the economic structure and drive the healthy development of student fitness in the surrounding areas. The current industrial structure and urbanization in China should shift the focus of development and construction from large cities on the eastern coast to inland cities and suburbs around cities, remote areas, and rural areas, and at the same time, strengthen the fitness environment and promote positive interaction between social institutions, families, school communities, and the interpersonal environment of young people.
5.1.3. Undertaking City Building Focused on Fitness and Maintaining a Cautious Approach to the Rapid Urbanization of Eastern China
The urbanization rate is a measure of regional urbanization, and it is a major factor in the field of social development. According to the latest statistics from the National Development and Reform Commission, the urbanization rate of China’s resident population reached 64.72% by the end of 2021. However, population urbanization is only one measure of the degree of urbanization; the quality of urbanization development still needs to be measured in conjunction with the level of public services such as healthcare and social security. With the rapid increase in urbanization, it is worth noting the impact of urbanization on the physical fitness of young people. In this study, we found that the risk of failing physical fitness among male junior high school students was positively correlated with urbanization, and that it was more profoundly affected in the developed eastern regions. The results of this study are consistent with the findings of several scholars, such as the finding that urbanization leads to a decrease in physical activity in the population, which results in increased health risks. The frequency of MVPA (moderate and vigorous physical activity) was significantly lower among adolescents living in urban areas than rural adolescents [
102], while lower physical activity led to a decrease in physical fitness [
103,
104]. Higher physical fitness is more prevalent in rural areas [
105]. In addition, studies have found that the growth and development of children and adolescents have increased with urbanization, and that the detection of overweight and obesity among children and adolescents has also increased, resulting in a decline in their physical fitness [
106]. However, some scholars have also shown that urbanization has a positive effect on the health of the population. Adolescents in urban areas had better results than rural adolescents in terms of muscle strength, speed agility, CRF, and explosive power [
107]. Urbanization affects the health of the population by increasing the economic level of individuals and the social security system, and the infrastructure and social conditions of developed areas make it easier for residents to access fitness environments and sports facilities [
108,
109]. We speculate that this may be due to the fact that some of the regions are in the early stages of urbanization, which has led to a significant increase in the level of economic development of the regions, bringing more benefits and better living resources to the residents, as well as a more robust health care system, which has helped to improve the health of the residents and children and adolescents. However, the increasing level of urbanization also has a direct impact on people’s lifestyles and diets. As adolescents are at a sensitive stage of growth and development, they are also one of the key groups affected by urbanization and information technology. Changes in dietary structure and habits, as well as the excessive involvement of electronic culture in their lives, lead to problems such as sedentary myopia, which have a significant impact on the physical fitness of adolescents [
110]. Due to the contradictory results of the currently available studies and the fact that relevant indicators for evaluating urbanization were not fully included in this investigation, no clear conclusions can be drawn on how urbanization affects health. As other studies have shown, the impact of urbanization on health may be influenced by human development indices [
111]. For example, there may be cultural differences between studies, differences in the definition of urban and rural cultural environments, and differences in the assessment of physical fitness in each country. What is certain, however, is that rapid urbanization has some side effects, such as a reduction in environmental quality and air pollution [
112]. At present, China is in the process of changing from high-speed urbanization to high-quality urbanization. It is necessary to carry out more in-depth and prudent research and planning measures on the problems that urbanization may bring, to promote a new urbanization strategy with people at its core, to fully reflect the idea of putting people first, and to scientifically promote the construction of healthy cities.
6. Conclusions
This study analyzed the influencing factors and spatial patterns of adolescent low physical fitness in China through the recently published MGWR model using natural and socioeconomic data aggregated from the 2018 China National Student Physical Fitness Survey and various Chinese statistics. The need to intervene in the spatial scales of influencing factors in conducting analyses of adolescent physical fitness issues is highlighted, and corresponding regionalized interventions are proposed. The results show that:
Natural environmental indicators such as elevation and precipitation, as well as socio-economic indicators such as non-farm industrial structure ratio and urbanization rate, have a significant effect on low physical fitness among Chinese youth, and demonstrated that the effect is spatially heterogeneous and multi-scale. The application of the MGWR model may yield more reliable results compared to OLS and GWR in conducting future studies on the spatial influence mechanism of adolescent physical fitness status.
The spatial pattern of the influence of each indicator on low physical fitness was revealed. For the male group, the regression coefficient for the urbanization rate was positive, and the non-farm structure ratio and precipitation reduced the incidence of low physical fitness among male adolescents. The spatial heterogeneity of annual precipitation is high. There is a degree of spatial heterogeneity in terms of the effect of urbanization rates. The impact of the non-farm structure ratio exists on a global scale. For female adolescents, the three main influencing factors are mean altitude, annual precipitation, and the non-farm structure ratio, which are statistically significant. Mean altitude has a moderate spatial scale of effect, and there is spatial heterogeneity in its influence. All three indicators had a negative effect on the model. The coefficient of influence of the natural environment is the largest in absolute value, indicating that, for women, the natural environment in which they live is more inextricably linked to their own physical fitness.
The current uneven and inadequate development of the physical fitness status of youth in different regions of China still exists, and there is a need to strengthen the regional youth physical fitness as well as reduce the number of physically disadvantaged individuals. Different types of regional physical fitness status aggregation and different approaches should be adopted to achieve refined and differentiated management. The regional industrial structure and current urbanization should shift the focus of construction from large eastern coastal cities to inland cities and suburbs around cities, remote areas in the west, and the countryside in general. The carrying capacity of the resources and environment should be improved to fully embody the new concept of high-quality urbanization that is people-oriented and integrated with the revitalization of the countryside. It is necessary to face the fact that there are large regional differences in the physical fitness status of Chinese youth and address the factors that influence it and develop targeted scientific physical fitness guidance programs according to local conditions. A sub-regional urban planning mechanism should be established to strengthen inter-regional linkages and take full account of the imbalances in various indicators of physical fitness due to different geographical locations.
Prospects and Limitations
The relationship between adolescent health and geographic space has always been an important topic that cannot be ignored by society and academia. The scope of this thesis covers all provinces in mainland China, and the sources of physical fitness data, various natural environments, and socio-economic influencing factors are of good scientific validity and representativeness. Based on this, this study constructed a multi-scale geographically weighted regression model to explore the multi-scale spatial influence mechanism of youth physical fitness status, which is a useful attempt in the context of current interdisciplinary development and promotes the future development of existing youth physical fitness models and spatial statistical models. In addition, this study proposes regionalized interventions based on the current state of the physical disadvantage of young people in different regions of China. Regionalized interventions can provide a basis for the future improvement of the physical fitness status of young people in China and the implementation of public health guidance program, as well as a reference for planning departments related to healthy cities and the environment, so this study also has a degree of practical significance. We believe that, in the future, the results of multi-scale geographically weighted regression models should be used to screen the key factors affecting youth physical fitness in each region and to conduct thematic regional classification and clustering studies on the theme of youth physical fitness. Furthermore, based on the differences in influencing factors between western and eastern China found in this study and the relatively low explanatory power of the model in northwest and southwest China, we also see a need to examine the association between physical fitness and regional folk culture among adolescents in China’s ethnic minority concentrations in the future. Finally, we argue that with the global outbreak of COVID-19, it is necessary to conduct a longitudinal spatio-temporal trend analysis using multi-year data related to adolescent physical fitness to quantify the direct and indirect impact of the epidemic on adolescent health in each region by comparing the changes in adolescent physical fitness before and after the epidemic at different spatial locations.
Despite the important methodological and theoretical and practical implications of this study, the following limitations remain unavoidable. Firstly, as China has been affected by COVID-19 in 2020, large-scale data collection on youth physical fitness surveying has taken a hit. Considering that there may be some degree of impact on adolescent fitness before and after the epidemic, cross-sectional data on adolescent fitness in 2018 were selected for this study and failed to demonstrate trends in the relationships between variables over time. Secondly, as the coverage scale of the current implementation program of the National Student Physical Fitness Survey is the provincial administrative units of China, the spatial unit included in this study is the corresponding 31 provinces of mainland China (excluding Hong Kong, Macao, and Taiwan). This may lead to changes in the configuration and number of spatial units in future studies of youth physical fitness at small local scales, such as prefecture-level cities or county-level cities, and the results of the model may change accordingly and overwrite some information. However, the choice of scale for processing geographically aggregated data is an issue that needs to be considered over time and is not specific to this study. Finally, as physical fitness is a composite construct, and as the geographical location and developmental status of different countries contribute to the complexity of the factors influencing physical fitness, the inclusion of the influencing factors and the results of the model in this study require further in-depth testing and research.