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Journal Article

Citation

Burgoyne L, Coleman R, Perry IJ. J. Public Health (Oxford) 2007; 29(3): 222-229.

Affiliation

Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Brookfield Health Sciences Complex, University College Cork, Ireland. l.burgoyne@ucc.ie

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/pubmed/fdm027

PMID

17554112

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There is an increasing interest in the use of walking routes to promote physical activity. We explored the stated attitudes of selected residents from two adjacent low-income city neighbourhoods towards walking. This was in response to negative results obtained in a quantitative study assessing the impact of the Slí-na-Sláinte (path to health), a signed heart health walking route. METHOD: This was a qualitative focus group study. RESULTS: The impact of the walking route was marginal. Four major themes influencing local walking emerged, centring on the social and physical environment. CONCLUSION: Findings suggest that the neighbourhoods are unreceptive to health promotion initiatives such as the Slí-na-Sláinte since residents are dealing with fundamental social and physical environmental issues. Initiatives such as the Slí-na-Sláinte need to be embedded in a supportive and facilitative environment if they are to achieve substantial impact.


Language: en

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