Department of Community Health and Primary Care, College of Medicine, University of Lagos& Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Idi-Araba, Lagos State, Nigeria.
Institute for Health and Equity, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA.
Afr Health Sci. 2023 Jun;23(2):572-581. doi: 10.4314/ahs.v23i2.66.
Physical inactivity is substantially linked to the rise in the global burden of non-communicable diseases. Faith-based organizations are recognized as potential partners for sustainable health interventions.
This study aims to explore the facilitators and barriers towards physical activity among adult church members in Lagos, Nigeria.
Sixteen focus group discussions (n-163) were conducted among adult male and female church members in twelve Anglican churches. The discussions were audio-taped, transcribed verbatim and analysed along with the field notes for themes using sequential approach with the aid of the Dedoose® software.
Individual facilitators of PA included self-discipline, and personal habits. Individual barriers were laziness, ill-health, fear of injury and pre-existing health conditions. Organizational facilitators included biblical verses promoting PA, while deterring factors were lack of safe spaces for PA and poor knowledge among church leadership. The community-level facilitators included pro-physical activity cultural practices, while the prevailing practice hiring house-helps, high costs of gym membership and gender norms discouraging men from participating in household chores served as deterring community-level factors. Environmental facilitators were the availability of safe spaces for PA while deterring factors were city living and high traffic density.
Several multi-level factors influence physical activity among church members. While it is pertinent to address personal factors, family and community factors also promote PA, therefore, group-level interventions may be warranted. Strategies that address the socio-cultural norms that serve as barriers to PA should also be included in the design of church-based PA programmes.
身体活动不足与全球非传染性疾病负担的增加密切相关。宗教组织被认为是可持续健康干预措施的潜在合作伙伴。
本研究旨在探讨尼日利亚拉各斯的成年教堂成员进行身体活动的促进因素和障碍。
在 12 所圣公会教堂中,对 163 名成年男性和女性教堂成员进行了 16 次焦点小组讨论。讨论进行了录音,逐字转录,并与现场记录一起使用 Dedoose®软件,按照顺序方法进行分析,以提取主题。
个人促进因素包括自律和个人习惯。个人障碍包括懒惰、健康状况不佳、害怕受伤和现有健康状况。组织促进因素包括提倡身体活动的圣经经文,而阻碍因素包括缺乏安全的身体活动空间和教会领导层缺乏知识。社区层面的促进因素包括支持身体活动的文化习俗,而普遍存在的聘请佣人的做法、健身房会员费用高和阻止男性参与家务劳动的性别规范则是阻碍社区层面的因素。环境促进因素是安全的身体活动空间的可用性,而阻碍因素是城市生活和高交通密度。
多个层面的因素影响着教堂成员的身体活动。虽然解决个人因素很重要,但家庭和社区因素也促进了身体活动,因此,可能需要进行群体层面的干预。在设计基于教堂的身体活动计划时,还应包括解决阻碍身体活动的社会文化规范的策略。