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Volume 30, Issue 2: April, 2003
Abstract
Participation in Recreational Physical Activity: Why Do
Socioeconomic Groups Differ?
Nicola W. Burton, BSC(Hons), MPsych(Clinical), Gavin Turrell,
PhD, and Brian Oldenburg, PhD
This qualitative study explored how influences on recreational
physical activity (RPA) were patterned by socioeconomic position.
Face-to-face interviews were conducted with 10 males and 10
females in three socioeconomic groups (N= 60). Influences
salient across all groups included previous opportunities,
physical health, social assistance, safety, environmental
aesthetics and urban design, physical and health benefits,
and barriers of self-consciousness, low skill, and weather/time
of year. Influences more salient to the high socioeconomic
group included social benefits, achieving a balanced lifestyle,
and the barrier of an unpredictable lifestyle. Influences
more salient to the high and mid socioeconomic groups included
efficacy, perceived need, activity demands, affiliation, emotional
benefits, and the barrier of competing demands. Influences
more salient to the low socioeconomic group included poor
health and barriers of inconvenient access and low personal
functioning. Data suggest that efforts to increase RPA in
the population should include both general and socioeconomically
targeted strategies.
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