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Parks promoting physical activity: synthesis of findings from interventions in seven national parks

We synthesized the results of 7 National Park Service pilot interventions designed to increase awareness of the health benefits from participation in recreation at national parks and to increase physical activity by park visitors. A content analysis was conducted of the final evaluation reports of t...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of physical activity & health 2010-03, Vol.7 Suppl 1 (s1), p.S67-S81
Main Authors: Hoehner, Christine M, Brownson, Ross C, Allen, Diana, Gramann, James, Behrens, Timothy K, Floyd, Myron F, Leahy, Jessica, Liddle, Joseph B, Smaldone, David, Spain, Diara D, Tardona, Daniel R, Ruthmann, Nicholas P, Seiler, Rachel L, Yount, Byron W
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:We synthesized the results of 7 National Park Service pilot interventions designed to increase awareness of the health benefits from participation in recreation at national parks and to increase physical activity by park visitors. A content analysis was conducted of the final evaluation reports of the 7 participating parks. Pooled data were also analyzed from a standardized trail-intercept survey administered in 3 parks. The theme of new and diverse partnerships was the most common benefit reported across the 7 sites. The 2 parks that focused on youth showed evidence of an increase in awareness of the benefits of physical activity. Many of the other sites found high levels of awareness at baseline (approaching 90%), suggesting little room for improvement. Five of the 7 projects showed evidence of an increase in physical activity that was associated with the intervention activities. Multivariate analyses suggested that the media exposure contributed to a small but significant increase in awareness of the importance of physical activity (6%) and number of active visits (7%). Enhancements and replication of these programs represents a promising opportunity for improving partnerships between public health and recreation to increase physical activity.
ISSN:1543-3080
1543-5474
DOI:10.1123/jpah.7.s1.s67