| Literature DB >> 29587402 |
Janet Lok Chun Lee1, Temmy Lee Ting Lo2, Rainbow Tin Hung Ho3,4,5.
Abstract
(1) Background: An outdoor gym (OG) is environmental infrastructure built in a public open space to promote structured physical activity. The provision of OGs is increasingly seen as an important strategy to realize public health agendas promoting habitual physical activity. A systematic review was conducted to synthesize characteristics of OG and OG users' experiences and perceptions in different cultural contexts; (2)Entities:
Keywords: environmental infrastructure; outdoor gym; physical activity; public health
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29587402 PMCID: PMC5923632 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15040590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flow chart of paper selection.
Study characteristics and methodological aspects of the included studies.
| Study Characteristics | Number of Articles | Studies |
|---|---|---|
| Country | ||
| Australia | 2 | [ |
| Canada | 1 | [ |
| Hong Kong | 1 | [ |
| Taiwan | 1 | [ |
| China | 1 | [ |
| Brazil | 1 | [ |
| USA | 1 | [ |
| Chile | 1 | [ |
| Participant characteristics | ||
| Facility users only | 4 | [ |
| Facility users and park users/neighborhood residents | 5 | [ |
| Participants characteristics | ||
| 18–60+ | 6 | [ |
| >50 | 3 | [ |
| Type of publication | ||
| Peer-reviewed journal (published) | 7 | [ |
| Thesis (unpublished) | 2 | [ |
| Methodology | ||
| Pure qualitative | 2 | [ |
| Mixed-methods | 4 | [ |
| Quantitative | 3 | [ |
| Qualitative data collection method (Qualitative studies and mixed-methods studies) | ||
| Face-to-face interview | 5 | [ |
| Open-ended questions | 1 | [ |
| Data creditability (Qualitative studies and mixed-methods studies) | ||
| Peer debriefing | 2 | [ |
| Not reported | 4 | [ |
Characteristics of outdoor gyms of the included studies.
| Study | Country | Terminology; | Supervision/Instructional Support | Primary User/Target User | Description of OGs; | No. of Equipment at Study Site | Type of Equipment # | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aerobic | Muscle-Strengthening | Muscle-Flexibility | Balance | |||||||
| [ | Taiwan | “Outdoor fitness equipment”; | Not evident | Older adults | “Designs and shapes are similar to those found in gyms”; | 6 | √ | Not clear | √ | Not clear |
| [ | Canada | “Active park”; | Not evident | Adults | “Parks with fitness equipment” | 5–20 | Not clear | √ | √ | Not clear |
| [ | Australia | “Outdoor gym”; | Instructional class & usage guide | Adults | “Contemporary mechanical installations consisting of a variety of robust fixed equipment targeting fitness, strength and balance may assist individuals in meeting current physical activity guidelines” | 12 | √ | √ | √ | √ |
| [ | Hong Kong | “Elderly fitness corner’; | Not evident | Older adults | “aimed to provide suitable and free-of-charge equipment for elderly to stretch their muscles and improve level of coordination”; | 5 | √ | Not clear | √ | Not clear |
| [ | Brazil | “Golden age gym” | University student from physical education course as instructor; stretching and walking exercise program | Older adults | “These gyms are the result of a partnership between the municipality, a healthcare company, and the university” | 10 | √ | √ | √ | Not clear |
| [ | China | “National fitness path”; | Physical education management instructor | Older adults | “Built at outdoor, covered limited space; built according to landscape; simple and easily set up; small-scale investment; practical and appealing; convenient to the public; suitable for all ages; scientific, fun, fitness-oriented public exercise facilities”; | Not mentioned | √ | √ | √ | Not clear |
| [ | USA | “Fitness Zone”; | Not evident | Adult | “easy-to-use outdoor gyms consisting of durable, weather-, and vandal-resistant exercise equipment for strength training and aerobic exercise.”; | 8 | √ | √ | Not clear | Not clear |
| [ | Chile | “Open Gym” “Street Gym”; | Not evident | Young adult | “Typically composed of four to 12 different machines, each of which may contain more than one exercise unit, open gyms permit users to define and follow their own routines, as well as to execute them in the company of others.” | 8–14 * | √ | √ | √ | Not clear |
| [ | Western Australia | “Stretch station circuit”; | Website | Adult | “installed at 500 metre intervals along one of the looping footpaths (2.5 km full circle);” | Not mentioned | × | × | √ | × |
# Judged based on descriptions from text, equipment name, and equipment photos provided; * The 8–14 machines consist of 18–29 working units.
Recurring themes, subthemes related to experiences, and perceptions of public exercise facilities.
| Theme | Subthemes | Studies Supporting Subthemes | Supporting Quotations from Qualitative Data | Evidence from Survey Data |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health | Rehabilitation | [ | “I have a frozen shoulder problem, so I came to the park to do some arm stretches, and then, I came frequently to do the pull. Now, I feel that my shoulder is getting better and becoming more relaxed.” [ | 39% of the fitness zone users reported that losing weight was the most common reason for using the fitness equipment ( |
| Social connectedness | New friendship | [ | “You come here frequently and you become familiar with the other people here; then, you become friends.” [ | |
| Affordable | Free of charge | [ | “I’m a low income parent. Going to the gym is not affordable for our family. That’s not an option … it’s my only option for resistance training equipment.” [ | Survey respondents rated on average 3.77 (SD = 1.63) on a 7-point Likert-scale on the statement ‘I only do this type of exercise because the equipment is freely available’ ( |
| Support | Maintenance and management Inadequate | [ | “The national fitness paths in our surroundings have not been receiving any management or maintenance since they were installed.” [ | |
| Design and promotion | Quantity and variety of equipment Safety Advertisement Shade Location close to attractions | [ | “I don’t think there are enough things to do there that people would [go] out particularly to do it. You don’t have anything like a basketball court or something that would draw people here for the exercise. If you were drawing people here for exercise and they wanted to spend a few minutes before or after doing something like that, it might be a bit different.” [ | Survey respondents rated on average 4.37 (SD = 1.47) on a 7-point Likert-scale on the statement ‘the [local government] should provide more equipment in the park’ ( |