We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Active Travel to Primary Schools in Ireland: An Opportunistic Evaluation of a Natural Experiment.
- Authors
Lambe, Barry; Murphy, Niamh; Bauman, Adrian
- Abstract
Background: There is a paucity of intervention studies assessing active travel to school as a mechanism to increase physical activity. This paper describes the impact of a community-wide intervention on active travel to primary schools in 2 Irish towns. Methods: This was a repeat cross-sectional study of a natural experiment. Self-report questionnaires were completed by 5th and 6th grade students in 3 towns (n = 1038 students in 2 intervention towns; n = 419 students in 1 control town) at baseline and by a new group of students 2 years later at follow-up. The absolute change in the proportion of children walking and cycling to school (difference in differences) was calculated. Results: There was no overall intervention effect detected for active travel to or from school. This is despite an absolute increase of 14.7% (1.6, 27.9) in the proportion of children that indicated a preference for active travel to school in the town with the most intensive intervention (town 2). Conclusions: Interventions designed to increase active travel to school hold some promise but should have a high-intensity mix of infrastructural and behavioral measures, be gender-specific, address car dependency and focus on travel home from school initially.
- Subjects
IRELAND; PHYSICAL activity; PRIMARY schools; CHILDREN; PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of walking; PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of cycling
- Publication
Journal of Physical Activity & Health, 2017, Vol 14, Issue 6, p448
- ISSN
1543-3080
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1123/jpah.2016-0429