Park improvements and park activity: a natural experiment
Parks are an important setting for leisure-time physical activity. Understanding how to attract residents to parks and encourage park users to be physically active is an important public health initiative. Natural experiments are a research priority for investigating whether changes to the physical...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of preventive medicine 2012-06, Vol.42 (6), p.616-619 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Parks are an important setting for leisure-time physical activity. Understanding how to attract residents to parks and encourage park users to be physically active is an important public health initiative. Natural experiments are a research priority for investigating whether changes to the physical environment affect physical activity; however, natural experiments involving parks have rarely been conducted.
This natural experiment examined whether improvements to a park in Victoria, Australia, increased its use and park-based physical activity of users.
Observational data were collected on park use and park-based activity among park users at the intervention park and a control park at three time points; baseline (T1, August 2009); post-improvement (T2, March 2010); and 12 months after baseline (T3, August 2010). At each time point, observations were undertaken during three 1.5-hour periods each day on 9 days. Analyses were conducted in 2011.
In the intervention park, there were significant increases from pre- to post-improvement in the number of park users (T1=235, T3=985) and the number of people observed walking (T1=155, T3=369) and being vigorously active (T1=38, T3=257). At the control park, counts of usage decreased over the same period and no differences in walking or vigorous activity were observed.
Improving the features of a local neighborhood park may lead to increased usage and physical activity. |
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ISSN: | 0749-3797 1873-2607 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.amepre.2012.02.015 |