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How athletes coped with COVID-19 restrictions: differences between Switzerland and Italy
Author(s) -
Halasz Geza,
Villani Matteo,
M. Rivas-Castillo Andrea,
Cassina Tiziano,
Capelli Bruno
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
swiss sports and exercise medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.11
H-Index - 13
eISSN - 2673-2327
pISSN - 2297-8712
DOI - 10.34045/sems/2020/18
Subject(s) - athletes , curfew , government (linguistics) , football , pandemic , anxiety , political science , psychology , league , coping (psychology) , covert , covid-19 , public relations , medicine , psychiatry , physical therapy , disease , law , infectious disease (medical specialty) , linguistics , philosophy , physics , pathology , astronomy
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic is a global crisis of unprecedented scale in modern times. The initial outbreak of COVID-19 in Wuhan spread rapidly, affecting other parts of China and soon other countries becoming a global threat. [1]On 11 March 2020, the WHO has declared the ‘Pandemic state’ calling the governments to take ‘urgent and aggressive action’ to delay and mitigate the peak of infection.To respond to COVID-19 public health experts and government officials are taking several measures, including social distancing, self-isolation, or quarantine; strengthening health facilities to control the disease; and asking people to work at home.To safeguard the health of athletes and others involved all forms of organized sport have been either cancelled or postponed. These range from mass participation events such as marathon races to football league and even to the Olympics and Paralympics that for the first time in the history of the modern games, have been postponed, and will be held in 2021.All sport in Italy had been suspended from early March and from April the lockdown measures had been extended to the training session for professional and non-professional athletes within all sport facilities. Unlike Italy, the Swiss government has not imposed a general curfew so athletes continued to train outdoor although training in a group was forbidden. [2,3]Some athletes in this situation will be able to build on existing coping resources while others athletes may experience psychological symptoms including fear of being infected, anxiety of physical recovery if infected, disturbed sleep, eating disorders, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and family conflicts.

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