Abstract :
Inactivity has been identified as a major contributor to the burden of disease
among older Australians, particularly those in culturally-diverse communities.
This study assessed the facilitators and barriers to physical activity in older people
from culturally-diverse communities, and investigated the predictors of physical
activity participation by recruiting 333 older people from seven different communities
in the western suburbs of Melbourne, Australia. A survey questionnaire
that recorded physical activity and the barriers to and facilitators of activity was
interviewer-administered in the participants’ preferred language. The data were
analysed using bivariate and multivariate inferential statistical methods. Personal
barriers to physical activity, such as poor health, lacking the energy to exercise,
being too tired and low motivation, were highly prevalent in all groups. Specific
factors, such as ‘being self-conscious about my looks ’, were more prevalent
among the Vietnamese, as were concerns about the weather among Macedonians
and Croatians. Across all groups, perceptions of health and safety strongly influenced
physical activity behaviour, more so than the external environment. Some
of the barriers can be addressed with a common approach, but others in some
communities will require particular strategies.
Keywords :
SHANE THOMAS , older adults , ethnic minorities , Physical Activity , Ethnicity , Cultural diversity