AI Article Synopsis

  • Time barriers are a major reason people avoid exercise and public transport, so addressing these issues is vital for health promotion.
  • The study examined five interventions and how program developers perceive and tackle time-related challenges.
  • Strategies varied, with some focusing on personal attitudes and others on broader social factors, with the most effective approaches coming from programs that actively engaged potential participants to refine their offerings.

Article Abstract

Lack of time is the main reason people say they do not exercise or use public transport, so addressing time barriers is essential to achieving health promotion goals. Our aim was to investigate how time barriers are viewed by the people who develop programs to increase physical activity or use active transport. We studied five interventions and explored the interplay between views and strategies. Some views emphasized personal choice and attitudes, and strategies to address time barriers were focused on changing personal priorities or perceptions. Other views emphasized social-structural sources of time pressures, and provided pragmatic ideas to free up time. The most nuanced strategies to address time barriers were employed by programs that researched and solicited the views of potential participants. Two initiatives re-shaped their campaigns to incorporate ways to save time, and framed exercise or active transport as a means to achieve other, pressing, priorities. Time shortages also posed problems for one intervention that relied on the unpaid time of volunteers. Time-sensitive health and active transport interventions are needed, and the methods and approaches we describe could serve as useful, preliminary models.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/heapro/daq060DOI Listing

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