Most youth training programs keep strength and endurance separate. Coaches worry that lifting weights could slow kids down. Or that running too much could shrink their muscles.
This idea is called the "interference effect." It's been studied for years in adults. But no one was sure if the same rule applied to growing bodies.
Meanwhile, childhood fitness levels keep dropping. Kids today run slower and jump shorter than kids did 30 years ago. Finding the best way to train young bodies matters more than ever.
The old rule, rewritten
For a long time, trainers believed you had to pick a lane. Want to be strong? Lift heavy. Want to run far? Skip the weights.
But here's the twist. In kids and teens, that rule may not hold.
A new review pooled results from many studies on concurrent training (mixing strength and cardio in the same program). The researchers wanted to know if combining workouts hurts, helps, or makes no difference.
How the body handles both
Think of a young body like a sponge. It soaks up different kinds of training at the same time.
Adults sometimes struggle to build muscle while running a lot. Their bodies send mixed signals. Kids seem to avoid this problem.
Their growing muscles and lungs adapt to both challenges together. The result is a more well-rounded athlete.
Researchers searched five major science databases. They pulled together trials involving people aged 10 to 24. All studies compared concurrent training to strength-only or endurance-only routines.
The team used standard tools to check quality and then crunched the numbers across all the studies.
Kids who did concurrent training (mixing strength and cardio) had bigger gains in aerobic fitness than kids who only did cardio. Their VO2 max (a measure of how much oxygen the body uses during hard exercise) improved by about 2 units on average.
They also jumped higher. Leg power went up slightly but clearly.
Mixing workouts did not slow kids down or weaken their strength.
The order mattered too. Doing strength work first, then cardio, gave the best results. Taking no rest between the two also seemed to help. An eight-week program was enough to see real change.
This is where it gets interesting
The gains came only when kids trained three times a week or fewer. More sessions did not produce extra benefits.
That's actually good news for busy families. You don't need daily gym time to build a fitter kid.
Where this fits in the bigger picture
Youth coaches and PE teachers have long debated how to structure workouts. This review gives them firmer ground to stand on.
It suggests that training programs for young athletes can include both heavy lifts and distance running, as long as the volume stays reasonable. That matches what many elite youth programs already do, but now there's evidence to back it up.
What this means for your family
If your child plays a sport, adding two or three mixed workouts per week may help. That could mean bodyweight squats followed by a run. Or jumping drills before a bike ride.
Talk to your child's coach or pediatrician before starting anything new. Kids need proper form and rest, especially during growth spurts.
You do not need a gym. Parks, backyards, and school fields work fine.
Honest limits of this research
This review pooled studies that varied in quality and size. Some had small groups. Some measured fitness differently. The heterogeneity score (a measure of how much studies disagreed) was high for aerobic fitness.
That means the exact size of the benefit is fuzzy. The direction is clear, but the dose is not yet precise.
Researchers now need bigger, better-designed trials. They should test different age groups separately. A 10-year-old's body responds differently than a 20-year-old's.
Longer follow-up would also help. Do these gains stick into adulthood? Do they lower injury risk? These questions remain open.