Age, sex and other correlates with active travel walking and cycling in England: Analysis of responses to the Active Lives Survey 2016/17

Active travel (walking or cycling for transport) can generate personal and environmental benefits. We determined the frequency of participation in walking or cycling active travel by age and sex, as well as used multivariate analysis to find correlations with many other factors using a large cross-s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Preventive medicine 2019-06, Vol.123, p.225-231
Hauptverfasser: Brainard, Julii, Cooke, Rachel, Lane, Kathleen, Salter, Charlotte
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Active travel (walking or cycling for transport) can generate personal and environmental benefits. We determined the frequency of participation in walking or cycling active travel by age and sex, as well as used multivariate analysis to find correlations with many other factors using a large cross-sectional 2016/17 survey of people living in England. Walking and cycling active travel were explored separately. Most respondents reported no active travel, but at least 25% of people under age 45 met activity recommendations only from active travel. Otherwise, (unlike other types of physical activity) active travel declined consistently with increased age. Men reported much more cycling active travel than women, who were more likely to do any active travel walking and therefore more likely to meet activity guidelines from just active travel walking. Lower levels of disability, fewer children in household, and working full time increased active travel. Season was sometimes relevant. BMI, personal-effectiveness, deprivation and rurality had mixed relationships with types of active travel. Understanding differences in correlates for cycling vs. walking active travel could help tailor local promotion programmes for each. The analysis suggests that motivators and barriers for active travel greatly by age. •Young women often walked, did more active travel walking than young men.•Unlike leisure activity, participation in active travel was lower as age went up.•Among those who did any, active travel alone often met weekly activity guidelines.•Higher BMI was linked to less active cycling but not walking for transport.•Mood and outlook mostly didn't link to how much active travel people did.
ISSN:0091-7435
1096-0260
DOI:10.1016/j.ypmed.2019.03.043