Cargando…

Beyond Walking: An Assessment and Description of Streets as Potential Physical Activity Places in Low-Income Communities

Low-income communities often have fewer quality community-level physical activity places (PAPs) or resources (e.g., parks, playgrounds). When present, barriers like traffic, distance, and crime often prevent access. Creative solutions and better understanding of current and potential realistic PAPs...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Umstattd Meyer, M. Renée, Prochnow, Tyler, Ylitalo, Kelly R., Gómez, Luis, Sharkey, Joseph R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JHEAL 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10522000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37771477
_version_ 1785110261856731136
author Umstattd Meyer, M. Renée
Prochnow, Tyler
Ylitalo, Kelly R.
Gómez, Luis
Sharkey, Joseph R.
author_facet Umstattd Meyer, M. Renée
Prochnow, Tyler
Ylitalo, Kelly R.
Gómez, Luis
Sharkey, Joseph R.
author_sort Umstattd Meyer, M. Renée
collection PubMed
description Low-income communities often have fewer quality community-level physical activity places (PAPs) or resources (e.g., parks, playgrounds). When present, barriers like traffic, distance, and crime often prevent access. Creative solutions and better understanding of current and potential realistic PAPs are necessary for children and families to be active. Streets are rarely considered potential PAPs despite their ubiquity and accessibility. This article describes street segments as potential PAPs in two low-income Mexican-heritage colonias communities along the Texas-Mexico border. Promotora-researchers conducted PAP assessments of all street segments (n=867) in the two communities to describe the availability and quality of their physical activity features (e.g., basketball hoops, bicycles), amenities (e.g., paved driveways, yard space), and incivilities (e.g., vandalism, loose dogs). Streets in these communities did contain features and amenities associated with physical activity promotion. On average, street segments had 6.10 (SD=7.20) physical activity-promoting features, 27.65 (SD=27.30) physical activity-promoting amenities, and both were assessed as good-to-fair quality. Future physical activity programming should consider incorporating streets as potential PAPs to enhance physical activity and active play. Further, evaluating streets as PAPs in this way may provide insight into locations for temporary place-based programs such as Play Streets. Future research should also examine residents’ perceptions of their streets as PAPs for safe physical activity and active play, not just as places to walk, and which PAP characteristics matter for safe physical activity and active play to occur on streets.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10522000
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher JHEAL
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-105220002023-09-28 Beyond Walking: An Assessment and Description of Streets as Potential Physical Activity Places in Low-Income Communities Umstattd Meyer, M. Renée Prochnow, Tyler Ylitalo, Kelly R. Gómez, Luis Sharkey, Joseph R. J Healthy Eat Act Living Articles Low-income communities often have fewer quality community-level physical activity places (PAPs) or resources (e.g., parks, playgrounds). When present, barriers like traffic, distance, and crime often prevent access. Creative solutions and better understanding of current and potential realistic PAPs are necessary for children and families to be active. Streets are rarely considered potential PAPs despite their ubiquity and accessibility. This article describes street segments as potential PAPs in two low-income Mexican-heritage colonias communities along the Texas-Mexico border. Promotora-researchers conducted PAP assessments of all street segments (n=867) in the two communities to describe the availability and quality of their physical activity features (e.g., basketball hoops, bicycles), amenities (e.g., paved driveways, yard space), and incivilities (e.g., vandalism, loose dogs). Streets in these communities did contain features and amenities associated with physical activity promotion. On average, street segments had 6.10 (SD=7.20) physical activity-promoting features, 27.65 (SD=27.30) physical activity-promoting amenities, and both were assessed as good-to-fair quality. Future physical activity programming should consider incorporating streets as potential PAPs to enhance physical activity and active play. Further, evaluating streets as PAPs in this way may provide insight into locations for temporary place-based programs such as Play Streets. Future research should also examine residents’ perceptions of their streets as PAPs for safe physical activity and active play, not just as places to walk, and which PAP characteristics matter for safe physical activity and active play to occur on streets. JHEAL 2022-12-23 /pmc/articles/PMC10522000/ /pubmed/37771477 Text en © JHEAL, 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).
spellingShingle Articles
Umstattd Meyer, M. Renée
Prochnow, Tyler
Ylitalo, Kelly R.
Gómez, Luis
Sharkey, Joseph R.
Beyond Walking: An Assessment and Description of Streets as Potential Physical Activity Places in Low-Income Communities
title Beyond Walking: An Assessment and Description of Streets as Potential Physical Activity Places in Low-Income Communities
title_full Beyond Walking: An Assessment and Description of Streets as Potential Physical Activity Places in Low-Income Communities
title_fullStr Beyond Walking: An Assessment and Description of Streets as Potential Physical Activity Places in Low-Income Communities
title_full_unstemmed Beyond Walking: An Assessment and Description of Streets as Potential Physical Activity Places in Low-Income Communities
title_short Beyond Walking: An Assessment and Description of Streets as Potential Physical Activity Places in Low-Income Communities
title_sort beyond walking: an assessment and description of streets as potential physical activity places in low-income communities
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10522000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37771477
work_keys_str_mv AT umstattdmeyermrenee beyondwalkinganassessmentanddescriptionofstreetsaspotentialphysicalactivityplacesinlowincomecommunities
AT prochnowtyler beyondwalkinganassessmentanddescriptionofstreetsaspotentialphysicalactivityplacesinlowincomecommunities
AT ylitalokellyr beyondwalkinganassessmentanddescriptionofstreetsaspotentialphysicalactivityplacesinlowincomecommunities
AT gomezluis beyondwalkinganassessmentanddescriptionofstreetsaspotentialphysicalactivityplacesinlowincomecommunities
AT sharkeyjosephr beyondwalkinganassessmentanddescriptionofstreetsaspotentialphysicalactivityplacesinlowincomecommunities