Walking, sustainability and health: findings from a study of a Walking for Health group

Not only is it tacitly understood that walking is good for health and well‐being but there is also now robust evidence to support this link. There is also growing evidence that regular short walks can be a protective factor for a range of long‐term health conditions. Walking in the countryside can b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health & social care in the community 2017-05, Vol.25 (3), p.1218-1226
Hauptverfasser: Grant, Gordon, Machaczek, Kasia, Pollard, Nick, Allmark, Peter
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container_issue 3
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container_title Health & social care in the community
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creator Grant, Gordon
Machaczek, Kasia
Pollard, Nick
Allmark, Peter
description Not only is it tacitly understood that walking is good for health and well‐being but there is also now robust evidence to support this link. There is also growing evidence that regular short walks can be a protective factor for a range of long‐term health conditions. Walking in the countryside can bring additional benefits, but access to the countryside brings complexities, especially for people with poorer material resources and from different ethnic communities. Reasons for people taking up walking as a physical activity are reasonably well understood, but factors linked to sustained walking, and therefore sustained benefit, are not. Based on an ethnographic study of a Walking for Health group in Lincolnshire, UK, this paper considers the motivations and rewards of group walks for older people. Nineteen members of the walking group, almost all with long‐term conditions, took part in tape‐recorded interviews about the personal benefits of walking. The paper provides insights into the links between walking as a sustainable activity and health, and why a combination of personal adaptive capacities, design elements of the walks and relational achievements of the walking group are important to this understanding. The paper concludes with some observations about the need to reframe conventional thinking about adherence to physical activity programmes.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/hsc.12424
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Access
adherence
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Chronic illnesses
Countryside
Ethnic groups
Ethnicity
Female
health
Health Promotion
Health services utilization
Humans
Illnesses
Interviews as Topic
Male
Middle Aged
Older people
Physical activity
Physical fitness
Protective factors
Qualitative Research
Rewards
Social Environment
Sustainability
United Kingdom
Walking
Well being
title Walking, sustainability and health: findings from a study of a Walking for Health group
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