| Literature DB >> 35995575 |
Steve Haake1, Helen Quirk2, Alice Bullas1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To support efforts to increase social prescribing and reduce levels of physical inactivity, parkrun UK and the Royal College of General Practitioners together developed the parkrun practice initiative to link general practices to local parkruns (free, weekly, timed, physical activity events). General practice staff are encouraged to take part in parkrun events themselves and to encourage patients to participate. AIM: To provide insights for primary care clinicians about parkrun participants (parkrunners), especially those with characteristics of patients who might be signposted to physical activity. DESIGN ANDEntities:
Keywords: exercise; health promotion; long-term health conditions; parkrun; running; social prescribing; walking
Year: 2022 PMID: 35995575 PMCID: PMC9423046 DOI: 10.3399/BJGP.2022.0001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Gen Pract ISSN: 0960-1643 Impact factor: 6.302
Survey questions analysed in this study
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[Answers: No/Yes, limited a little/Yes, limited a lot/Don’t know, rather not say]. A list of 142 conditions were given plus ‘other’ where a free text response was requested; responders could select as many conditions as were applicable. [Answers: much worse/worse/no effect/better/much better]. Responders were asked to select a maximum of three answers out of a possible 20 motives plus [Answers: much worse/worse/no impact/better/much better]. There was a list of 15 impacts plus |
Figure 1.Characteristics of survey participants ranked by average running time: a) count; b) proportion male and female; c) age; d) Index of Multiple Deprivation quartile (Q1 is most deprived); e) activity level at registration in bouts of 30 min or more in previous 4 weeks. Comparison with walkers at P <0.001 with effect sizes: *small, **moderate, ***large. Red and pink bars represent walkers. FR = front runners. MR = median runners. RW = runners/walkers. SR = slower runners. W = walkers.
Figure 2.Characteristics of survey participants ranked by average running time: a) proportion limited by a health condition for ≥12 months; and b) proportion with each health condition (only top 10 conditions shown). Note: participants could have more than one health condition. Comparison with walkers using χ
How this fits in
| To support efforts to increase social prescribing and signposting to physical activity opportunities, the Royal College of General Practitioners and parkrun UK developed the parkrun practice initiative, which, so far, has seen more than 1500 general practices link with their local parkrun events (free, weekly, timed 5 km events). Not all GPs and primary care clinicians are confident in prescribing physical activity and this study aimed to provide useful insights from a large survey of parkrunners. A total of 9.3% of responders had at least one health condition lasting ≥12 months, rising to 45.2% for those taking part as walkers. The conditions reported match some of those for which GPs would prescribe physical activity, such as depression, anxiety, arthritis, hypertension, obesity, and being overweight. More than seven out of 10 of those surveyed who had health conditions improved their fitness, physical health, mental health, and other measures, suggesting that parkrun could also deliver some of the components of the |