Understanding environmental influences on walking; Review and research agenda.

Am J Prev Med

Cancer Prevention Research Centre, School of Population Health, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Published: July 2004

AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding the impact of environmental factors on walking behaviors is crucial for public health, as walking is the most common form of physical activity for adults.
  • A review of 18 studies revealed that different environmental attributes influence various types of walking, such as exercise and commuting; factors like aesthetics, facility convenience, and traffic perceptions play significant roles.
  • Future research should focus on creating reliable measurement tools, determining causal relationships, and developing theoretical models to better understand how environment and other factors interact to affect walking behavior.

Article Abstract

Background: Understanding how environmental attributes can influence particular physical activity behaviors is a public health research priority. Walking is the most common physical activity behavior of adults; environmental innovations may be able to influence rates of participation.

Method: Review of studies on relationships of objectively assessed and perceived environmental attributes with walking. Associations with environmental attributes were examined separately for exercise and recreational walking, walking to get to and from places, and total walking.

Results: Eighteen studies were identified. Aesthetic attributes, convenience of facilities for walking (sidewalks, trails); accessibility of destinations (stores, park, beach); and perceptions about traffic and busy roads were found to be associated with walking for particular purposes. Attributes associated with walking for exercise were different from those associated with walking to get to and from places.

Conclusions: While few studies have examined specific environment-walking relationships, early evidence is promising. Key elements of the research agenda are developing reliable and valid measures of environmental attributes and walking behaviors, determining whether environment-behavior relationships are causal, and developing theoretical models that account for environmental influences and their interactions with other determinants.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.amepre.2004.03.006DOI Listing

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