Pollard Tessa M, Guell Cornelia, Morris Stephanie
Department of Anthropology and Wolfson Research Institute for Health and Wellbeing, Durham University, Dawson Building, South Road, Durham, DH1 3LE, UK.
University of Exeter Medical School, Knowledge Spa, Royal Cornwall Hospital, Truro, TR1 3HD, UK.
Soc Sci Med. 2020 Oct;262:113241. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113241. Epub 2020 Jul 28.
Increased attention to links between walking, health and wellbeing have contributed to a growth in the number of walking groups meeting on a regular basis to offer short, social walks. Walking group interventions are known to increase physical activity and to have wide-ranging health benefits, and there is evidence that drop out is generally low. The aim of this paper is to synthesise qualitative research on experiences and perceptions of group walking in order to develop a new conceptual understanding of the group walking experience. We conducted a systematic search of the literature and identified 22 such studies which we synthesised using meta-ethnography. Included studies were conducted in the UK, USA, Australia and Ireland. Most reported research was undertaken with outdoor walking groups, some of which catered specifically for people who shared a disease experience or a disability. A smaller number of studies examined indoor mall walking groups, while two looked at perceptions of non-participants of group walking as a potential activity. From the original constructs identified in the papers we derived five higher order constructs: seeking and enjoying health and fitness, attachment to walking, providing purpose and confidence, mobile companionship and a peaceful and contemplative shared respite from everyday life. We argue that participating in a walking group provides a set of experiences that together constitute a specific form of shared or communal therapeutic mobility that is not simply the accumulation of the constructs we have outlined. Rather, we suggest that an initial instrumental and disciplinary focus on health and fitness is transformed through the experience of group walking into a shared meaningful and enjoyable practice; an emergent communal therapeutic mobility, which recruits and retains large numbers of group walkers. However, this communal therapeutic mobility is not equally accessible to all.
对步行、健康和幸福之间联系的关注度不断提高,促使定期举行的短途社交步行团体数量有所增加。已知步行团体干预措施能增加身体活动,并带来广泛的健康益处,而且有证据表明退出率普遍较低。本文旨在综合关于团体步行体验和认知的定性研究,以便对团体步行体验形成新的概念性理解。我们对文献进行了系统检索,确定了22项此类研究,并使用元民族志方法进行了综合分析。纳入研究在英国、美国、澳大利亚和爱尔兰开展。大多数报告的研究是针对户外步行团体进行的,其中一些团体专门为有共同疾病经历或残疾的人提供服务。少数研究考察了室内商场步行团体,还有两项研究探讨了非团体步行参与者对其作为一种潜在活动的认知。从论文中确定的原始概念出发,我们得出了五个高阶概念:追求并享受健康与健身、对步行的依恋、提供目标和信心、移动陪伴以及从日常生活中获得宁静沉思的共享喘息机会。我们认为,参加步行团体能提供一系列体验,这些体验共同构成了一种特定形式的共享或集体治疗性移动,而不仅仅是我们所概述概念的简单累加。相反,我们认为,最初对健康和健身的工具性和规范性关注,通过团体步行体验转变为一种共享的、有意义且令人愉快的实践;一种新兴的集体治疗性移动,它吸引并留住了大量团体步行者。然而,并非所有人都能平等地获得这种集体治疗性移动。