Sport, Physical Activity, and Health Inequalities Among Youth Who Are Incarcerated: Perspectives of Youth Custody Workers in Ontario, Canada
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Review of Relevant Literature
2.1. Health, SPA, and Incarceration
2.2. The Psychosocial Impacts of Incarceration and Potential Contributions of SPA
2.3. SPA and Young People Who Are Incarcerated
3. Context and Methods
3.1. Context: Youth Custody in Ontario, Canada
3.2. Recruitment and Data Collection
3.3. Research Ethics
4. Findings
4.1. The Potential Benefits of SPA to Youth’s Holistic Heallth
There’s the nutrition…aspect of it, we do a little bit [of teaching on that topic]…. [Young people] might tell me that they smoke 100 cigarettes outside of the facility…. [I will say] “well you haven’t had a cigarette that long, that shows that you’re able to quit!”
A lot of the kids that we got in custody already had either severe mental health [issues] and been diagnosed, or we’re getting ready to be diagnosed…. Changing the way that we do recreation in those settings would go a long way to help them manage their own mental health better … [and] we started identifying that.
Our staff don’t just sit back at a desk and make sure the unit is running smoothly…. They’re interacting, they’re engaging, they’re building relationships, they’re having conversations with [youth]. That way, we can be proactive in supporting them, managing behaviors. So, when they go to the gym or the workout room, a lot of our staff…will participate in whatever they’re doing. So, if they’re playing volleyball, it’ll be they’ll play with them. If they’re playing basketball, staff will jump in and play with them…. It’s a way to, to build that relationship with them, and in different ways, rather than [if] you’re the youth worker back in the unit managing the place. It’s a way to have those relationships built and kind of made stronger a lot of times, too…. It fosters a different relationship with them than seeing them as the guy that’s consequencing them or timing them out.
I think the youth in secure custody use sports and physical activity as [an] outlet for their emotions and [it] can act as a release for their frustrations and stress…. It keeps there [sic] mind busy and they can get away from their negative thoughts and feelings. I feel that participating in [an] organized sport helps them feel like they are part of a team, building their relationships with both peers and the staff. It also teaches them about living a healthy lifestyle and the importance of staying active.
4.2. SPA: Helping to Build a Therapeutic Alliance?
Most people usually just think recreation is fitness, and it involves pumping up basketballs and playing a game and doing that kind of stuff. Where we had changed the idea and started to move to a more therapeutic recreation idea, and that sort of mantra, kind of long before that happened.
when they spend those hours away [from the routine of incarceration], or they get engaged…you can talk to them. You’re not going to cure them with one talk, but at least you can introduce a question in their mind, and you can [get] them to maybe think, even for a brief period of time, about the consequences of their behavior or what they want out of life, what they want out of the world, some kind of hope that most of these kids generally don’t have. So that’s the value of getting into that from the therapeutic point of view…, as a way to get the kids’ defenses down so that you can introduce a thought process that help them go in the right direction.
Many activities can be done with our youth as a relationship building/therapeutic tool and/or as a backdrop for some of the deeper more trauma based work we do with youth. Engaging in physical/recreational activity with youth while having targeted conversation is often less anxiety provoking than simply talking about behavioural issues that are often symptomatic of deeper-rooted traumas.
4.3. A Health Deficit? Perspectives on Youth Who Are Incarcerated and the Social Determinants of Health
A lot of our youth come through with mental health struggles and a lot of our youth [are] coming with addiction struggles…. They generally don’t lead a super healthy lifestyle prior to coming in to us, either the way they eat [or] the way they exercise or don’t exercise. So just trying to introduce them to that and then let them see how it feels. When our guys come in, they’re eating three square meals a day, they’re having snack, they’re getting proper sleep, they’re getting physical education or recreation. They’re no longer having drugs or alcohol in their system.(Calvin)
When you look past the surface of what you’re seeing—so you might be seeing anger, frustration or disinterest, or whatever, it might be a range of things—often it’s their learned behaviors from years of practice and, in often cases, trauma.
We do have Indigenous programming every Tuesday night. We offer smudging every shift. We have … a June 21 feast set up for National Indigenous Peoples’ Day. Our old secure facility, we had a sweat lodge there…. So, we do provide a lot of cultural programming because we want our youth to feel like they’re at home, kind of thing. And if their surroundings are more normal and what they’re used to, they’re more apt to build that relationship so that we can help them. Because nothing really works without the relationship piece.
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | When broadly discussing young people who are incarcerated, we use the term “young people” rather than “youth” in recognition that, in many jurisdictions, young adults (aged 18–25) are held in custody facilities alongside children under the age of 18 (see Norman et al., 2024 for a discussion of these terminologies in the context of sport and young people who are incarcerated). However, when discussing our study, specifically, we follow the Canadian and Ontario governments in using the term “youth who are incarcerated” to recognize that the custody system is intended for those under the age of 18. |
2 | We use the term “people deprived of liberty” (PDL) when broadly discussing any persons who are incarcerated, rather than specifcally young people or youth. |
3 | The number of secure custody facilities operated by transfer payment organizations has changed since the research was conducted, due to closures implemented by the Ontario provincial government. |
4 | The third member of the research team did not participate in writing the current article due to a conflict of interest. |
5 | We initially idenfited 49 child codes, but refined them and combined them into 19 codes. These 19 were then consolidated into the following parent codes: (1) SPA as a contributor to holistic health; (2) implementation or organization of SPA programs; (3) challenges and barriers to delivery or intended outcomes of SPA; (4) context of Ontario and/or Canadian youth justice; and (5) other themes. The child codes for SPA as a contributor to holistic health were (i) physical health benefits; (ii) mental health benefits; (iii) relathionships and rapport; (iv) other immediate benefits for youth; and (v) other long-term benefits for youth. |
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Norman, M.; Mandel, R.H. Sport, Physical Activity, and Health Inequalities Among Youth Who Are Incarcerated: Perspectives of Youth Custody Workers in Ontario, Canada. Youth 2025, 5, 64. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5030064
Norman M, Mandel RH. Sport, Physical Activity, and Health Inequalities Among Youth Who Are Incarcerated: Perspectives of Youth Custody Workers in Ontario, Canada. Youth. 2025; 5(3):64. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5030064
Chicago/Turabian StyleNorman, Mark, and Rubens Heller Mandel. 2025. "Sport, Physical Activity, and Health Inequalities Among Youth Who Are Incarcerated: Perspectives of Youth Custody Workers in Ontario, Canada" Youth 5, no. 3: 64. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5030064
APA StyleNorman, M., & Mandel, R. H. (2025). Sport, Physical Activity, and Health Inequalities Among Youth Who Are Incarcerated: Perspectives of Youth Custody Workers in Ontario, Canada. Youth, 5(3), 64. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5030064