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Health Promotion Practice
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Article

Physical Activity Influences in a Disadvantaged African American Community and the Communities' Proposed Solutions

Sarah F. Griffin, PhD1*, Dawn K. Wilson, PhD2, Sara Wilcox, PhD2, Jacqueline Buck, MA2, and Barbara E. Ainsworth, PhD3

1 Clemson University
2 University of South Carolina
3 Arizona State University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: sgriffi{at}clemson.edu.


   Abstract
The purpose of this assessment is to increase our understanding of how safety and environmental factors influence physical activity among African American residents living in a low-income, high-crime neighborhood and to get input from these residents about how to best design physical activity interventions for their neighborhood. Twenty-seven African American adult residents of a low-income, high-crime neighborhood in a suburban southeastern community participated in three focus groups. Participants were asked questions about perceptions of what would help them, their families, and their neighbors be more physically active. Two independent raters coded the responses into themes. Participants suggested three environmental approaches in an effort to increase physical activity: increasing law enforcement, community connectedness and social support, and structured programs. Findings suggest that safety issues are an important factor for residents living in disadvantaged conditions and that the residents know how they want to make their neighborhoods healthier.

First published on August 28, 2007, doi:10.1177/1524839906296011

Health Promotion Practice 2008;9:180.

A more recent version of this article appeared on April 1, 2008


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