4.2 Article

Canadian policy perspectives on promoting physical activity across age-friendly communities: lessons for advocacy and action

Journal

AGEING & SOCIETY
Volume 39, Issue 2, Pages 307-339

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0144686X17000939

Keywords

age-friendly cities; built environment; city planning; older adults; healthy public policy; physical activity; social participation

Categories

Funding

  1. Policy, Location and Access in Community Environments (PLACE) Research Lab at the University of Alberta School of Public Health
  2. CIHR/PHAC/AI Applied Public Health Chair from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  3. Public Health Agency of Canada
  4. Alberta Innovates - Health Solutions

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Population ageing combined with physical inactivity has critical implications for the public health of communities in the twenty-first century. In the last decade, the World Health Organization launched the age-friendly cities agenda, aiming to address population ageing through whole-systems, rights-based, health equity-focused approaches. An important intervention for age-friendly communities is modifying built environments to support population-level physical activity. Physical activity can help mitigate impacts of chronic diseases and social isolation on older adults. Need for advocacy and action in this area raises questions of how to develop supportive environments for physical activity across age-friendly community types. In Canada, a substantial proportion of older adults live outside large urban municipalities, for which scant research exists on fostering age-friendly built environments. To this end, we conducted qualitative research involving semi-structured interviews with 21 municipal policy influencers in Alberta, Canada to gather perspectives on development and early implementation of an age-friendly policy framework in the small urban and rural context. Our findings are organised by three main themes providing key lessons for advocacy and action, namely pursuing comprehensive planning, promoting public engagement and prioritising the needs of older adults. This research informs advocacy and action priorities in promoting built environment modification for routine physical activity as part of an age-friendliness agenda for small urban and rural regions of Canada and other countries.

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