School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ, UK.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2010 Jan;64(1):41-8. doi: 10.1136/jech.2009.086918.
Environmental perceptions appear to play a role in determining behaviour in children, although their influence on active commuting remains unclear. This study examines whether attitudes, social support and environmental perceptions are associated with active commuting behaviour in school children and whether these associations are moderated by the distance to school.
Data were collected as part of the SPEEDY study (Sport, Physical activity and Eating behaviour: Environmental Determinants in Young people), a cross-sectional study of 2064 children from schools in Norfolk, UK. Data regarding the usual mode of travel to school, attitudes towards and social support for active commuting, perceptions of the neighbourhood and route to school were assessed using questionnaires completed by 2012 children and their parents. Distance to school was estimated using a Geographic Information System and this was used to compare associations between personal and environmental factors and active travel, across different distance categories.
Forty per cent of children reported usually walking to school, with 9% cycling and the remainder using motorised travel. Parental attitudes and safety concerns, the presence of social support from parents and friends and parent-reported neighbourhood walkability were all found to be predictors of active commuting, with children receiving peer and family support and living in supportive environments being more likely to walk or cycle. There was some evidence of a moderating effect of distance whereby attitudes were more important for short distances and safety concerns long.
Both attitudinal and environmental perceptions are associated with children's active commuting behaviours. Given the difficulty in modifying attitudes directly, the effect on them of interventions to provide more supportive environments should be evaluated.
环境感知似乎在决定儿童行为方面发挥作用,尽管它们对积极通勤的影响尚不清楚。本研究考察了态度、社会支持和环境感知是否与学童的积极通勤行为相关,以及这些关联是否受学校距离的调节。
数据是作为 SPEEDY 研究(运动、体育活动和饮食行为:年轻人的环境决定因素)的一部分收集的,这是一项对英国诺福克学校的 2064 名儿童进行的横断面研究。使用问卷调查了 2012 名儿童及其家长,评估了他们通常上学的交通方式、对积极通勤的态度和社会支持、对邻里和上学路线的看法。使用地理信息系统估算了学校的距离,并将其用于比较不同距离类别下个人和环境因素与积极出行之间的关联。
40%的儿童报告通常步行上学,9%骑自行车,其余则乘坐机动车。家长的态度和安全顾虑、来自家长和朋友的社会支持以及家长报告的邻里可步行性,都是积极通勤的预测因素,得到同伴和家庭支持、生活在支持性环境中的儿童更有可能步行或骑自行车。距离对态度有一定的调节作用,即态度对短距离更为重要,而安全顾虑对长距离更为重要。
态度和环境感知都与儿童的积极通勤行为相关。考虑到直接改变态度的难度,应该评估干预措施对提供更支持性环境的影响。