| Literature DB >> 28696375 |
Mika R Moran1, Pnina Plaut2, Dafna Merom3.
Abstract
Children's outdoors play (OP) is an important source of physical activity that has been decreasing in recent years due to changes in neighborhood design, parent safety concerns and child sedentary leisure. However, few studies examined such determinants from children's perspectives. This study explores environmental and socio-cultural aspects of children's OP using a qualitative and quantitative approach. Data was collected in two phases: (1) a survey on OP and related variables among 5th and 6th graders (10-12 years old) (n = 573); and (2) a mapping activity and semi-structured interview among a subsample of the survey (n = 80). The most common locations for routine OP were parks (40%) followed by public facilities (26%) and streets (17%). OP was significantly associated with perceived environment, independent mobility and gender, but not with neighborhood type. Inner-city participants reported a higher number and greater variety of OP areas (23 vs. 14). Three main barriers of OP were identified-low quality and poorly maintained play areas, other people in public spaces, and social norms that undermine OP. Thus, in order to encourage routine OP, environmental change to create safe and attractive OP settings should be accompanied by community interventions to enhance social norms that are supportive of OP.Entities:
Keywords: children; mixed methods; neighborhood; outdoors play; physical activity
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28696375 PMCID: PMC5551197 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph14070759
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Neighborhood-level descriptive statistics of Geographical Information System (GIS)-based environmental variables.
| Land Area (sq Km) a | Population ᵇ | Urban Form | Land Uses (Sq Km, Percent) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intersections Density c | Residential Density d | Built Coverage e | Green Open Space | Public Facilities | Retail | ||||
| 0.73 | 15,532 | 134.23 | 17.40 | 0.44 | 0.02 (3.92%) | 0.07 (13.72%) | 0.08 (15.68%) | ||
| 0.843 | 9805 | 97.25 | 9.67 | 0.38 | 0.06 (9.68%) | 0.08 (12.90%) | 0.03 (4.84%) | ||
| 1.353 | 32,546 | 112.29 | 17.61 | 0.37 | 0.08 (8.17%) | 0.13 (13.19%) | 0.09 (8.85%) | ||
| 1.555 | 21,203 | 63.00 | 13.44 | 0.37 | 0.09 (7.68%) | 0.17 (13.68%) | 0.03 (2.71%) | ||
| 1.473 | 5692 | 59.06 | 4.73 | 0.32 | 0.15 (13.63%) | 0.05 (4.54%) | 0.003 (0.27%) | ||
| 0.545 | 8987 | 33.06 | 11.98 | 0.22 | 0.07 (15.41%) | 0.10 (22.29%) | 0.004 (0.91%) | ||
| 1.262 | 14,297 | 48.33 | 9.80 | 0.25 | 0.32 (32.96%) | 0.16 (16.48%) | 0.01 (1.45%) | ||
* Neighborhoods that were included in both survey and mapping activity; a Source: ICBS (Israel Central Bureau of Statistics), 2011; b Source: ICBS, 2008; c number of intersections per sq km; d number of households per residential dunam; e the proportion of building area from all built lots.
Frequencies of outdoors play (OP) at different locations, by the research variables.
| 6% ( | 24% ( | 30% ( | 40% ( | 23% ( | 25% ( | 26% ( | 26% ( | 37% ( | 28% ( | 18% ( | 17% ( | ||
| 8% ( | 25% ( | 28% ( | 39% ( | 28% ( | 22% ( | 25% ( | 25% ( | 43% ( | 26% ( | 15% ( | 16% ( | ||
| 4% ( | 23% ( | 32% ( | 41% ( | 19% ( | 28% ( | 26% ( | 27% ( | 32% ( | 30% ( | 20% ( | 18% ( | ||
| 5% ( | 15% ( | 29% ( | 51% ( | 20% ( | 21% ( | 27% ( | 32% ( | 32% ( | 27% ( | 20% ( | 21% ( | ||
| 7% ( | 33% ( | 32% ( | 28% ( | 27% ( | 29% ( | 24% ( | 20% ( | 43% ( | 29% ( | 15% ( | 13% ( | ||
| 3% ( | 21% ( | 31% ( | 45% ( | 18% ( | 26% ( | 28% ( | 28% ( | 28% ( | 28% ( | 24% ( | 20% ( | ||
| 10% ( | 29% ( | 30% ( | 31% ( | 33% ( | 23% ( | 22% ( | 22% ( | 52% ( | 28% ( | 7% ( | 13% ( | ||
| 5% ( | 23% ( | 25% ( | 47% ( | 18% ( | 25% ( | 26% ( | 32% ( | 29% ( | 27% ( | 22% ( | 22% ( | ||
| 7% ( | 25% ( | 33% ( | 35% ( | 27% ( | 25% ( | 26% ( | 22% ( | 41% ( | 29% ( | 15% ( | 15% ( | ||
0 = never, 1 = seldom: once in two weeks or less, 2 = sometimes: 1–2 times a week, 3 = often: 3 times a week or more. N’type = neighborhood type; IM = Independent Mobility, PEChF = Perceived Environment (as children-friendly).
Logistic regressions to predict OP at park, public facility and street (OR (CI)).
| Outdoors Play at Least Three Times a Week at - | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Park | Public Facility | Street | |
| Gender | 2.51 *** (1.70–3.71) | 1.78 *** (1.26–2.52) | 1.57 * (1.08–2.28) |
| Independent mobility | 1.65 * (1.12–2.42) | 1.45 * (1.01–2.07) | 2.89 *** (1.90–4.36) |
| PEChF | 1.23 ** (1.06–1.43) | 1.17 * (1.01–1.35) | 1.29 *** (1.10–1.52) |
| Model summary | |||
* p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001.
Figure 1Reported play areas.
Findings from semi-structured interviews—themes, subthemes and selected quotes.
| Themes | Subthemes | Selected Quotes |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Play areas | 1.1. Public parks and play grounds | 1.1.1. Facilitator: |
| 1.1.2. Facilitator: | ||
| 1.1.3. | ||
| 1.2. The creation of informal play settings in common areas of residential buildings | 1.2.1. Other: | |
| 1.2.2. Other: | ||
| 2. Other people | 2.1. Presence/absence of other people (general) | 2.1.1. Facilitator: |
| 2.1.2. Facilitator: | ||
| 2.1.3. Barrier: | ||
| 2.2. Presence of intimidating groups (older kids) in parks | 2.2.1. Barrier: | |
| 2.2.2. Barrier: | ||
| 2.3. Presence of parents/grandparents with young children in parks | 2.3.1. Barrier: | |
| 2.3.2. Barrier: | ||
| 3. Social norms | 3.1. Low social acceptability of OP | 3.1.1. Barrier: |
| 3.1.2. Barrier: | ||
| 3.2. Shift from active outdoors to passive indoors leisure | 3.2.1. Other: | |
| 3.2.2. Other: |
Figure 2Spatial configuration and internal characteristics of parks in suburban and inner-city parks.
Figure 3Neighborhood boundaries: (a) Inner-city neighborhood boundary with pedestrian-oriented design; (b) Suburban neighborhood boundary with automobile-oriented design. (Source: Screen captures of Google Street View panoramic images).