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Journal Article

Citation

Zhang R, Zhang CQ, Gan Y, Li D, Rhodes RE. Appl. Psychol. Health Wellbeing 2019; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Affiliation

University of Victoria, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, International Association of Applied Psychology, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/aphw.12164

PMID

31062509

Abstract

BACKGROUND: As an accessible and inexpensive activity in daily life for employees, transport-related walking is a promising focus of physical activity initiatives. The purpose of this study was to integrate worksite neighbourhood walkability with the theory of planned behaviour (TPB) to predict transport-related walking in Chinese employees using a longitudinal design.

METHODS: A sample of 157 employees (Mage  = 33.26 years; SD = 7.18) reported their social cognition and worksite neighbourhood environment perceptions at the baseline. Self-reported transport-related walking was measured at two time points, 1 month apart.

RESULTS: Path analyses revealed that intention had a direct effect on walking, while attitudes, subjective norm, and perceived behavioural control had indirect effects on walking via intention. Past behaviour had a significant effect on walking, attenuating the intention-behaviour effect substantially. However, there was no indirect effect from perceived worksite neighbourhood walkability on walking through the TPB constructs. Furthermore, perceived neighbourhood walkability did not moderate the intention-walking relationship.

CONCLUSIONS: Perceived worksite neighbourhood walkability had limited effects on transport-related walking, which seems to be a motivated and habitual behaviour. Habit-based interventions may be a priority over social cognitive and environmental change interventions, and future experimental studies are needed.

© 2019 The International Association of Applied Psychology.


Language: en

Keywords

active transportation; office employees; theory of planned behavior; transport-related walking; worksite neighbourhood walkability

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