1Department of Epidemiology, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC; 2Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC; 3Department of City and Regional Planning, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA; and 4RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA.
Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2013 Oct;45(10):1981-7. doi: 10.1249/MSS.0b013e318293330e.
Parks offer a free option for physical activity in many communities. How much time people spend using parks and the contribution that parks makes to their physical activity is not known. This study describes patterns of park use and physical activity among a diverse adult sample.
From five US states, 248 adults enrolled in or near 31 study parks. Participants wore a global positioning system (GPS) monitor (Qstarz BT-Q1000X) and an ActiGraph accelerometer (GT1M) concurrently for 3 wk. Parks were mapped from local and national park shape files. Park visits and travel to and from the parks were derived from the objective data.
Participants visited parks a median of 2.3 times per week, and park visits lasted a median of 42.0 min. Overall, participants engaged in a median of 21.7 min·d-1 of moderate activity and 0.1 min·d-1 of vigorous activity, with an average of 8.2% of all moderate and 9.4% of all vigorous activity occurring within the parks. Among those with at least one park visit (n = 218), counts per minute, moderate, moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), number and time in MVPA bouts per day, and sedentary behavior were all higher on days when a park was visited compared with days when a park was not visited. Considering several definitions of active travel, walking or bicycling to and from the park added an additional 3.7-6.6 mean minutes of MVPA per park visit.
Parks contributed as a place and destination for physical activity but were underused. One of the next steps in this line of inquiry is to understand characteristics of parks used more often as a place and destination for physical activity.
在许多社区,公园为人们提供了免费的体育活动选择。人们在公园中花费的时间以及公园对其体育活动的贡献程度尚不清楚。本研究旨在描述不同成年人群体使用公园和进行体育活动的模式。
从美国五个州中选取了 248 名参与者,他们在 31 个研究公园附近居住或工作。参与者佩戴全球定位系统(GPS)监测仪(Qstarz BT-Q1000X)和 ActiGraph 加速度计(GT1M),连续佩戴 3 周。通过当地和国家公园形状文件绘制公园地图。利用客观数据获取公园访问和往返公园的行程。
参与者平均每周访问公园 2.3 次,每次公园访问时长中位数为 42.0 分钟。总体而言,参与者平均每天进行 21.7 分钟的中等强度活动和 0.1 分钟的剧烈活动,其中公园内的中等强度活动和剧烈活动分别占比 8.2%和 9.4%。在至少有一次公园访问的 218 名参与者中,每分钟计步数、中等强度活动、中高强度活动(MVPA)、MVPA 次数和每日 MVPA 时长,以及久坐行为,在有公园访问的日子里均高于无公园访问的日子。考虑到几种活跃出行的定义,步行或骑自行车往返公园会额外增加 3.7-6.6 分钟的 MVPA。
公园为人们进行体育活动提供了场所和目的地,但利用率较低。下一步研究将关注那些使用频率更高的公园的特征,以便更好地了解这些公园作为人们进行体育活动的场所和目的地的作用。