As one of the most popular sport modalities in Brazil, and with an exponential growth in Europe, futsal is characterized by intermittent stimulus of anaerobic high intensity sprints. The running-based anaerobic sprint test (RAST) is one of the most common tests to assess anaerobic power in futsal athletes, however, it presents both time and physical challenges. Therefore, we aimed to correlate RAST with a simpler test, the vertical jump (VJ), in teenage male futsal athletes; Methods: Thirteen volunteers were enrolled and underwent two visits to the laboratory, one for the VJ and the other for the RAST in a randomized order; Results: The association test indicates a strong and significant correlation between VJ and RAST. We conclude that VJ can be used as an alternative to RAST in teenage male futsal athletes.
This study aims to present the historical context of the concept of disability, following the history of humanity from ancient times on accounts of the process of inclusion and acceptance of people with disabilities to the present day. The content of the work is the result of a literature review on scientific articles, using terms of disability, psychology, deafness, historical context. The study's reflection presented a discussion in various areas of health on the topic addressed, but does not present a closed and concrete concept of what it is to be disabled, the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities mentions disability as “physical impediments, intellectual or sensory ”(UN, 2006, Article 1). In the face of human evolution and concepts of humanity, we leave the claim that people with disabilities are worthy of being excluded from society, to the idea of contemporary social inclusion, where support mechanisms and attention to these people are much larger, but still exist Many barriers. It is assumed that even so, unconsciously, we do not change such behaviors, but rather change into a social masking expressed through attitudes of pity and pity, such as dealing with these individuals denying their self-sufficiency.
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