Abstract
Background The burden of ill-health due to inactivity has recently been highlighted. Better studies on environments that support physical activity are called for, including longitudinal studies of environmental interventions. A programme of residential street improvements in the UK (Sustrans ‘DIY Streets’) allowed a rare opportunity for a prospective, longitudinal study of the effect of such changes on older adults’ activities, health and quality of life.
Methods Pre–post, cross-sectional surveys were carried out in locations across England, Wales and Scotland; participants were aged 65+ living in intervention or comparison streets. A questionnaire covered health and quality of life, frequency of outdoor trips, time outdoors in different activities and a 38-item scale on neighbourhood open space. A cohort study explored changes in self-report activity and well-being postintervention. Activity levels were also measured by accelerometer and accompanying diary records.
Results The cross-sectional surveys showed outdoor activity predicted by having a clean, nuisance-free local park, attractive, barrier-free routes to it and other natural environments nearby. Being able to park one's car outside the house also predicted time outdoors. The environmental changes had an impact on perceptions of street walkability and safety at night, but not on overall activity levels, health or quality of life. Participants’ moderate-to-vigorous activity levels rarely met UK health recommendations.
Conclusions Our study contributes to methodology in a longitudinal, pre–post design and points to factors in the built environment that support active ageing. We include an example of knowledge exchange guidance on age-friendly built environments for policy-makers and planners.
Methods Pre–post, cross-sectional surveys were carried out in locations across England, Wales and Scotland; participants were aged 65+ living in intervention or comparison streets. A questionnaire covered health and quality of life, frequency of outdoor trips, time outdoors in different activities and a 38-item scale on neighbourhood open space. A cohort study explored changes in self-report activity and well-being postintervention. Activity levels were also measured by accelerometer and accompanying diary records.
Results The cross-sectional surveys showed outdoor activity predicted by having a clean, nuisance-free local park, attractive, barrier-free routes to it and other natural environments nearby. Being able to park one's car outside the house also predicted time outdoors. The environmental changes had an impact on perceptions of street walkability and safety at night, but not on overall activity levels, health or quality of life. Participants’ moderate-to-vigorous activity levels rarely met UK health recommendations.
Conclusions Our study contributes to methodology in a longitudinal, pre–post design and points to factors in the built environment that support active ageing. We include an example of knowledge exchange guidance on age-friendly built environments for policy-makers and planners.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | NA |
| Pages (from-to) | 1059-1065 |
| Number of pages | 9 |
| Journal | British Journal of Sports Medicine |
| Volume | 48 |
| Issue number | NA |
| Early online date | 14 Dec 2012 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Jun 2014 |
Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)
- longitudinal study
- environmental intervention
- residential street
- older adults
- activity
- health
- quality of life
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The effectiveness of ‘shared space’ residential street interventions on self-reported activity levels and quality of life for older people
Curl, A., Ward Thompson, C. & Aspinall, P., Jul 2015, In: Landscape and Urban Planning. 139, p. 117-125 9 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Activities
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Health, wellbeing and landscapes: salutogenic environments
Ward Thompson, C. (Invited speaker)
14 Oct 2020Activity: Academic talk or presentation types › Invited talk
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Shifting the evidence for policy and practice - longitudinal studies and natural experiments
Ward Thompson, C. (Keynote speaker)
18 Apr 2018Activity: Academic talk or presentation types › Invited talk
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'Landscape and Life' international conference
Ward Thompson, C. (Keynote/plenary speaker)
5 May 2017Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Participation in conference
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