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“In Initiative Overload”: Australian Perspectives on Promoting Physical Activity in the Workplace from Diverse Industries

Introduction: With two thirds of adults in paid employment and one third physically inactive, workplaces are an important setting for promoting more physical activity. We explored the attitudes and practices of employees and managers from different industries towards sitting and moving at work, to i...

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Autores principales: Chau, Josephine Y., Engelen, Lina, Kolbe-Alexander, Tracy, Young, Sarah, Olsen, Heidi, Gilson, Nicholas, Burton, Nicola W., Bauman, Adrian E., Brown, Wendy J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6388384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30759777
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16030516
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author Chau, Josephine Y.
Engelen, Lina
Kolbe-Alexander, Tracy
Young, Sarah
Olsen, Heidi
Gilson, Nicholas
Burton, Nicola W.
Bauman, Adrian E.
Brown, Wendy J.
author_facet Chau, Josephine Y.
Engelen, Lina
Kolbe-Alexander, Tracy
Young, Sarah
Olsen, Heidi
Gilson, Nicholas
Burton, Nicola W.
Bauman, Adrian E.
Brown, Wendy J.
author_sort Chau, Josephine Y.
collection PubMed
description Introduction: With two thirds of adults in paid employment and one third physically inactive, workplaces are an important setting for promoting more physical activity. We explored the attitudes and practices of employees and managers from different industries towards sitting and moving at work, to inform the development of acceptable solutions for encouraging businesses to adopt activity-promoting workplaces. Method: We conducted focus groups with employees and structured interviews with upper/middle managers from 12 organisations in a range of industries (e.g., education, healthcare, manufacturing, construction, insurance, mining). Topics focused on past and current workplace health and wellness initiatives, workplace culture and environment related to physical activity, responsibility for employee physical activity patterns at work, and enablers of/barriers to activity promoting workplaces. Results: Physical activity was not an explicit priority in existing occupational health and wellness initiatives. Instead, there was a strong focus on education about preventing and managing injuries, such as manual handling among non-office workers and desk-based ergonomics for office workers. Physical activity was viewed as a strategy for maintaining work ability and preventing injury, particularly in blue-collar staff, rather than for chronic disease prevention. Managers noted structural/organisational barriers/enablers to promoting physical activity at work (e.g., regulations, costs, competing concerns), while employees tended to focus on individual constraints such as time and geographic location. The issues of "initiative overload" and making physical activity a part of “business as usual” emerged as strong themes from employees and managers. Conclusions: While there is stakeholder enthusiasm for creating activity-promoting workplaces, multi-level support is needed to make physical activity an integral part of day-to-day business. The synergism between occupational health and safety priorities could be leveraged to facilitate the creation of activity-promoting workplaces.
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spelling pubmed-63883842019-02-27 “In Initiative Overload”: Australian Perspectives on Promoting Physical Activity in the Workplace from Diverse Industries Chau, Josephine Y. Engelen, Lina Kolbe-Alexander, Tracy Young, Sarah Olsen, Heidi Gilson, Nicholas Burton, Nicola W. Bauman, Adrian E. Brown, Wendy J. Int J Environ Res Public Health Article Introduction: With two thirds of adults in paid employment and one third physically inactive, workplaces are an important setting for promoting more physical activity. We explored the attitudes and practices of employees and managers from different industries towards sitting and moving at work, to inform the development of acceptable solutions for encouraging businesses to adopt activity-promoting workplaces. Method: We conducted focus groups with employees and structured interviews with upper/middle managers from 12 organisations in a range of industries (e.g., education, healthcare, manufacturing, construction, insurance, mining). Topics focused on past and current workplace health and wellness initiatives, workplace culture and environment related to physical activity, responsibility for employee physical activity patterns at work, and enablers of/barriers to activity promoting workplaces. Results: Physical activity was not an explicit priority in existing occupational health and wellness initiatives. Instead, there was a strong focus on education about preventing and managing injuries, such as manual handling among non-office workers and desk-based ergonomics for office workers. Physical activity was viewed as a strategy for maintaining work ability and preventing injury, particularly in blue-collar staff, rather than for chronic disease prevention. Managers noted structural/organisational barriers/enablers to promoting physical activity at work (e.g., regulations, costs, competing concerns), while employees tended to focus on individual constraints such as time and geographic location. The issues of "initiative overload" and making physical activity a part of “business as usual” emerged as strong themes from employees and managers. Conclusions: While there is stakeholder enthusiasm for creating activity-promoting workplaces, multi-level support is needed to make physical activity an integral part of day-to-day business. The synergism between occupational health and safety priorities could be leveraged to facilitate the creation of activity-promoting workplaces. MDPI 2019-02-12 2019-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6388384/ /pubmed/30759777 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16030516 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Chau, Josephine Y.
Engelen, Lina
Kolbe-Alexander, Tracy
Young, Sarah
Olsen, Heidi
Gilson, Nicholas
Burton, Nicola W.
Bauman, Adrian E.
Brown, Wendy J.
“In Initiative Overload”: Australian Perspectives on Promoting Physical Activity in the Workplace from Diverse Industries
title “In Initiative Overload”: Australian Perspectives on Promoting Physical Activity in the Workplace from Diverse Industries
title_full “In Initiative Overload”: Australian Perspectives on Promoting Physical Activity in the Workplace from Diverse Industries
title_fullStr “In Initiative Overload”: Australian Perspectives on Promoting Physical Activity in the Workplace from Diverse Industries
title_full_unstemmed “In Initiative Overload”: Australian Perspectives on Promoting Physical Activity in the Workplace from Diverse Industries
title_short “In Initiative Overload”: Australian Perspectives on Promoting Physical Activity in the Workplace from Diverse Industries
title_sort “in initiative overload”: australian perspectives on promoting physical activity in the workplace from diverse industries
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6388384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30759777
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16030516
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