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Perceived environment attributes, residential locaction, and walking for particular purposes

journal contribution
posted on 2004-01-01, 00:00 authored by N Humpel, N Owen, D Iverson, Evie Leslie, A Bauman
Background
Identifying environmental factors that can influence physical activity is a public health priority. We examined associations of perceived environmental attributes with walking for four different purposes: general neighborhood walking, walking for exercise, walking for pleasure, and walking to get to and from places.

Methods
Participants (n =399; 57% women) were surveyed by mail. They reported place of residence, walking behaviors, and perceptions of neighborhood environmental attributes.

Results
Men with the most positive perceptions of neighborhood “aesthetics” were significantly more likely (odds ratio [OR]=7.4) to be in the highest category of neighborhood walking. Men who perceived the weather as not inhibiting their walking were much more likely (OR=4.7) to be high exercise walkers. Women who perceived the weather as not inhibiting their walking were significantly more likely to be high neighborhood walkers (OR=3.8) and those with moderate perceptions of “accessibility” were much more likely to do more walking for pleasure (OR=3.5).

Conclusions
Different environmental attributes were associated with different types of walking and these differed between men and women. Approaches to increasing physical activity might usefully focus on those attributes of the local environment that might influence particular subsets of walking behavior.

History

Journal

American journal of preventive medicine

Volume

26

Pagination

119 - 125

Location

New York, N.Y.

ISSN

0749-3797

eISSN

1873-2607

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2004, American Journal of Preventive Medicine

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