Differences in the attitudes to sport psychology consulting between individual and team sport athletes

Abstract Background The purpose of the present study was to investigate how an athlete’s participation in either an individual or team sport is related to their attitude toward sport psychology consulting and their willingness to consult a sport psychology practitioner. Method The Sport Psychology A...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dáire Rooney, Robin C. Jackson, Neil Heron
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-04-01
Series:BMC Sports Science, Medicine and Rehabilitation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13102-021-00271-7
id doaj-478dc5fce9614447b83baa2ef7af1e1c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-478dc5fce9614447b83baa2ef7af1e1c2021-05-02T11:30:01ZengBMCBMC Sports Science, Medicine and Rehabilitation2052-18472021-04-011311810.1186/s13102-021-00271-7Differences in the attitudes to sport psychology consulting between individual and team sport athletesDáire Rooney0Robin C. Jackson1Neil Heron2School of Medicine, Dentistry and Biomedical Sciences, Queen’s University BelfastSchool of Sport, Exercise & Health Sciences, Loughborough UniversityCentre for Public Health Research, Queen’s UniversityAbstract Background The purpose of the present study was to investigate how an athlete’s participation in either an individual or team sport is related to their attitude toward sport psychology consulting and their willingness to consult a sport psychology practitioner. Method The Sport Psychology Attitudes-Revised form (SPA-R) (Martin, et al., Sport Psychol 16:272-90, 2020) was completed by 120 athletes from individual and team sports. A 2 (Type of sport: individual and team) × 2 (Gender) multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) was conducted with attitudes towards sport psychology as dependent variables. To identify attitudes that accentuated the differences related to type of sport, follow-up univariate analyses were performed. Results Results revealed that overall athletes involved in individual sports reported more positive attitudes towards sport psychology consulting than athletes involved in team sports. In particular, the athletes involved in individual sports were more likely to have greater confidence in sport psychology consulting. The findings also show that gender may mediate this association, indicated by a nearly significant two-way interaction effect for gender and type of sport (individual versus team) regarding confidence in sport psychology. The source of this marginal result was a larger effect of sport type for females than for males. Conclusions The findings of this study imply that athletes involved in individual sports are more likely to have positive attitudes towards sport psychology compared to athletes competing in team-based sports, with females more likely to view sport psychology positively than compared to their male counterparts. The results may go some way to assist sport psychologists to understand and address athletes’ concerns and to improve receptivity to sport psychology services.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13102-021-00271-7Sport psychologyIndividualTeamAttitudesStigma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dáire Rooney
Robin C. Jackson
Neil Heron
spellingShingle Dáire Rooney
Robin C. Jackson
Neil Heron
Differences in the attitudes to sport psychology consulting between individual and team sport athletes
BMC Sports Science, Medicine and Rehabilitation
Sport psychology
Individual
Team
Attitudes
Stigma
author_facet Dáire Rooney
Robin C. Jackson
Neil Heron
author_sort Dáire Rooney
title Differences in the attitudes to sport psychology consulting between individual and team sport athletes
title_short Differences in the attitudes to sport psychology consulting between individual and team sport athletes
title_full Differences in the attitudes to sport psychology consulting between individual and team sport athletes
title_fullStr Differences in the attitudes to sport psychology consulting between individual and team sport athletes
title_full_unstemmed Differences in the attitudes to sport psychology consulting between individual and team sport athletes
title_sort differences in the attitudes to sport psychology consulting between individual and team sport athletes
publisher BMC
series BMC Sports Science, Medicine and Rehabilitation
issn 2052-1847
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Background The purpose of the present study was to investigate how an athlete’s participation in either an individual or team sport is related to their attitude toward sport psychology consulting and their willingness to consult a sport psychology practitioner. Method The Sport Psychology Attitudes-Revised form (SPA-R) (Martin, et al., Sport Psychol 16:272-90, 2020) was completed by 120 athletes from individual and team sports. A 2 (Type of sport: individual and team) × 2 (Gender) multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) was conducted with attitudes towards sport psychology as dependent variables. To identify attitudes that accentuated the differences related to type of sport, follow-up univariate analyses were performed. Results Results revealed that overall athletes involved in individual sports reported more positive attitudes towards sport psychology consulting than athletes involved in team sports. In particular, the athletes involved in individual sports were more likely to have greater confidence in sport psychology consulting. The findings also show that gender may mediate this association, indicated by a nearly significant two-way interaction effect for gender and type of sport (individual versus team) regarding confidence in sport psychology. The source of this marginal result was a larger effect of sport type for females than for males. Conclusions The findings of this study imply that athletes involved in individual sports are more likely to have positive attitudes towards sport psychology compared to athletes competing in team-based sports, with females more likely to view sport psychology positively than compared to their male counterparts. The results may go some way to assist sport psychologists to understand and address athletes’ concerns and to improve receptivity to sport psychology services.
topic Sport psychology
Individual
Team
Attitudes
Stigma
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13102-021-00271-7
work_keys_str_mv AT dairerooney differencesintheattitudestosportpsychologyconsultingbetweenindividualandteamsportathletes
AT robincjackson differencesintheattitudestosportpsychologyconsultingbetweenindividualandteamsportathletes
AT neilheron differencesintheattitudestosportpsychologyconsultingbetweenindividualandteamsportathletes
_version_ 1721492054564929536