| Literature DB >> 32013952 |
Yasmin F van Kasteren1, Lucy K Lewis2, Anthony Maeder3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There are growing concerns over the health impacts of occupational sedentary behaviour on office-based workers and increasing workplace recognition of the need to increase physical activity at work. Social ecological models provide a holistic framework for increasing opportunities for physical activity at work. In this paper we propose a social ecological model of office-based physical activity and map it against the Capability Motivation Opportunity (COM-B) framework to highlight the mechanisms of behaviour change that can increase levels of physical activity of office-based workers. DISCUSSION: The paper proposes a social ecological model of physical activity associated with office-based settings. The model considers opportunities for both incidental and discretionary activities, as well as macro and micro factors on both socio-cultural and physical dimensions. The COM-B framework for characterising behaviour change interventions is used to highlight the underlying mechanisms of behaviour change inherent in the model. The broad framework provided by social ecological models is important for understanding physical activity in office-based settings because of the non-discretionary nature of sedentary behaviour of office-based work. It is important for interventions not to rely on individual motivation for behaviour change alone but to incorporate changes to the broader social ecological and physical context to build capability and create opportunities for more sustainable change.Entities:
Keywords: COM-B; Office work; Physical activity; Sedentary behaviour; Social ecological model
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32013952 PMCID: PMC6998192 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-8280-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Social ecological model of office-based physical activity mapped to COM-B. Individual factors in the model come from Sallis et al. [21]
Mapping aspects of the office physical environment to current physical activity guidelines
| Duration | Intensity | Location | Intention | Activity/ context | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Short | Light | Desk | Incidental | Standing | Sit-stand desk, talking to colleagues, printing, filing, standing whilst talking on the phone |
| Medium | Light | Desk | Discretionary | Standing | Sit-stand desk |
| Short | Light | Office Building | Incidental | Walking | Walking short distances (stop/start): Trips to and from bathroom, kitchen meeting rooms |
| Short/ Medium | Light | Precinct, Neighbourhood | Incidental | Commuting | Walk to car park or transit point |
| Medium/ Long | Light MVPA | Precinct, Neighbourhood | Discretionary | Commuting | Walking to worka |
| Medium/ Long | MVPA | Precinct, Neighbourhood | Discretionary | Commuting | Cycling to worka |
| Short | MVPA | Building | Incidental | Climbing stairs | Using the stair as an efficient way for getting from A to B |
| Short/ Medium | MVPA | Building | Discretionary | Climbing stairs | Using the stair for increasing PA |
| Medium | MVPA | Building | Discretionary | Gym | Gym, exercise classes, jogging |
| Medium | Light MVPA | Precinct, neighbourhood | Discretionary | Brisk walking | Walking breaks, walking groups |
| Medium | Light | Precinct, Neighbourhood | Discretionary | Work breaks | Walks out doors during breaks, walking to local shops and cafes, restaurants |
aLocal area (reasonable cycling distance 32 min – walking 22 min for FT worker [82]