Systematic Review of the Use of the Walk-Along Interview Method to Assess Factors, Facilitators and Barriers Related to Perceived Neighborhood Environment and Walking Activity in Healthy Older Adults
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Sources and Search Strategy
2.2. Selection Criteria
2.3. Study Selection and Data Extraction
2.4. Summarizing and Analyzing the Outcomes
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection
3.2. Study Area in Which WAI Was Applied
3.3. Relationships between Physical Environment and Walking in Healthy Older Adults
3.3.1. Pedestrian Infrastructure
- Presence of skateboarders and roller-bladers on sidewalks (n = 1, 3%) [13].
3.3.2. Safety
- Presence of authorized personnel (n = 1, 3%) [45].
3.3.3. Access to Facilities
3.3.4. Aesthetics
3.3.5. Environmental Conditions
3.4. Facilitators and Barriers to Walking in Healthy Older Adults
3.4.1. Environmental Dimension
- Presence of ramps rather than stairs [41].
- Presence of police patrols and neighborhood watch activities [45].
- Absence of signage [41].
- Absence of sidewalks [34].
- Absence of public toilets [41].
3.4.2. Intrapersonal Dimension
- Experiences of well-being and/or security they felt on previous walks that motivated and/or facilitated future walks [36];
- Going for walks as a means of retaining a feeling of autobiographical interiority [38];
- Adherence to routines to which the participant had become accustomed [56];
- Need to get away from the monotony of the home environment, loneliness and isolation [31].
- Reduced energy level and sense of balance [38].
- Some facilities (i.e., restaurants and cafes) were perceived as being unaffordable for some participants and did not encourage these participants to walk.
3.4.3. Interpersonal Dimension
3.4.4. Organizational Dimension
4. Discussion
4.1. Relationships between the Physical Environment and Walking Activity in Healthy Older Adults
4.1.1. Access to Facilities
4.1.2. Pedestrian Infrastructure
4.1.3. Safety
4.1.4. Aesthetics
4.1.5. Environmental Conditions
4.2. Facilitators and Barriers to Walking
4.2.1. Environmental Dimension
4.2.2. Intrapersonal Dimension
4.2.3. Interpersonal Dimension
4.3. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Themes | Subthemes | Environmental Factors | Number of Articles | Studies Reference Numbers |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pedestrian Infrastructure | Sidewalk characteristics | Sidewalks’ presence and continuity | 8 | [14,29,30,34,36,40,44,53] |
Sidewalks’ quality and maintenance | 13 | [13,14,29,30,34,36,39,41,44,45,46,48,51] | ||
Sidewalks’ slopes and curbs | 13 | [13,30,31,34,36,38,40,44,45,46,48,49,57] | ||
Temporary obstacles on sidewalks | 9 | [30,31,34,35,36,41,44,46,48] | ||
Connectivity [*] | 4 | [44,47,48,50] | ||
Sheltered walkways (in sidewalk characteristics) [*] | 4 | [13,29,41,53] | ||
Separation between pedestrians and non-motorized transport | Cyclists on sidewalks | 5 | [13,41,44,46,56] | |
Skateboarders and roller-bladers on sidewalks | 1 | [13] | ||
Safety | Crime-related safety | Lack of street lightning | 10 | [30,36,37,41,44,45,46,50,52,55] |
Upkeep (i.e., vacant houses, overgrown lots, vandalism) | 9 | [13,31,36,37,39,44,45,49,53] | ||
Other people | 11 | [14,32,40,44,45,46,48,50,52,54,55] | ||
Presence of authorized personnel | 1 | [45] | ||
Traffic-related safety | Zebra crossing characteristic and wayfinding signs | 11 | [13,30,36,37,39,40,41,44,46,48,55] | |
Heavy road traffic [*] | 6 | [34,40,44,46,47,56] | ||
Reckless driving behavior | 2 | [13,44] | ||
Access to facilities | Access to exercise opportunities | Access to recreational facilities | 13 | [14,31,34,37,39,40,41,45,47,49,53,55,56] |
Access to senior-oriented group activities | 6 | [32,33,37,45,47,56] | ||
Access to green open spaces | 15 | [13,14,31,34,37,40,41,44,45,47,49,51,52,56,57] | ||
Access to daily destinations | Access to daily destinations | 19 | [13,31,32,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,44,45,46,47,51,55,56] | |
Access to public transit | 9 | [13,14,36,44,45,48,50,55,56] | ||
Access to rest areas | Access to benches | 11 | [13,29,31,42,44,46,48,50,51,52,53] | |
Access to public washrooms | 4 | [13,46,48,53] | ||
Aesthetics | Building and streetscapes | Private property | 7 | [13,29,36,39,40,51,57] |
Public realm | 10 | [14,34,36,44,46,47,48,53,55,57] | ||
Natural scenery (green–blue spaces) | Presence of greenery | 17 | [14,29,34,36,39,40,41,42,44,45,46,49,50,51,52,53,56] | |
Presence of water | 8 | [14,42,44,45,50,51,55,56] | ||
Level of cleanness [*] | Presence of trash and level of cleanness [*] | 11 | [13,36,39,44,45,46,48,49,51,52,53] | |
Environmental conditions | WeatherWeather and seasonal/climatic conditions | Cold weather | 7 | [29,30,31,38,41,44,46] |
Hot weather | 3 | [13,31,35] | ||
Warm weather | 2 | [44,50] | ||
Environmental quality | High environmental quality | 2 | [13,39] | |
Pollution | 5 | [14,44,45,46,50] |
Socioecological Model | Factors | Facilitators | Barriers | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number of Articles | Studies‘ Reference Numbers | Number of Articles | Studies‘ Reference Numbers | ||
Environmental Dimension | Pedestrian infrastructure | 12 | [13,29,33,36,41,44,45,46,47,49,53,57] | 13 | [13,29,30,31,34,35,36,38,41,46,47,48,57] |
Safety | 10 | [13,29,32,36,44,45,46,47,53,55] | 15 | [13,31,32,36,37,39,40,41,44,46,47,48,49,55,56] | |
Access to facilities | 20 | [13,14,32,33,35,36,37,38,40,41,42,44,45,46,47,49,52,53,55,56] | 7 | [13,29,32,40,41,47,48] | |
Aesthetics | 14 | [36,39,41,42,44,45,46,47,49,51,52,53,56,57] | 6 | [36,39,41,46,47,53] | |
Environmental conditions | 3 | [44,45,46] | 10 | [13,29,30,31,33,35,38,41,46,48] | |
Intrapersonal Dimension | Health status | 4 | [13,38,40,56] | 8 | [13,14,31,32,35,38,40,48] |
Physical capabilities | 4 | [32,38,55,56] | 7 | [13,31,32,38,42,48,54] | |
Financial capabilities | 2 | [13,45] | 1 | [47] | |
Feelings and emotions | 4 | [31,36,38,56] | 2 | [36,56] | |
Interpersonal Dimension | Social exposures | 17 | [13,14,29,31,32,33,34,38,40,41,42,44,45,46,49,55,56] | 3 | [13,33,48] |
Organizational Dimension | Policy issues | 1 | [13] | 0 | ------- |
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Amaya, V.; Chardon, M.; Moulaert, T.; Vuillerme, N. Systematic Review of the Use of the Walk-Along Interview Method to Assess Factors, Facilitators and Barriers Related to Perceived Neighborhood Environment and Walking Activity in Healthy Older Adults. Sustainability 2024, 16, 882. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16020882
Amaya V, Chardon M, Moulaert T, Vuillerme N. Systematic Review of the Use of the Walk-Along Interview Method to Assess Factors, Facilitators and Barriers Related to Perceived Neighborhood Environment and Walking Activity in Healthy Older Adults. Sustainability. 2024; 16(2):882. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16020882
Chicago/Turabian StyleAmaya, Valkiria, Matthias Chardon, Thibauld Moulaert, and Nicolas Vuillerme. 2024. "Systematic Review of the Use of the Walk-Along Interview Method to Assess Factors, Facilitators and Barriers Related to Perceived Neighborhood Environment and Walking Activity in Healthy Older Adults" Sustainability 16, no. 2: 882. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16020882
APA StyleAmaya, V., Chardon, M., Moulaert, T., & Vuillerme, N. (2024). Systematic Review of the Use of the Walk-Along Interview Method to Assess Factors, Facilitators and Barriers Related to Perceived Neighborhood Environment and Walking Activity in Healthy Older Adults. Sustainability, 16(2), 882. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16020882