Illness, Injury, and Correlates of Aerobic Exercise and Walking: A Community Study
Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport 62(1): 1-9
Article 1991 English
Authors
CH
C.Richard Hofstetter
MH
Melbourne F. Hovell
CM
CAROL A. MACERA
Abstract
1 min read
This study explores differences in exercise and walking behavior among subjects who reported temporary or long-term illnesses or injuries serious enough to have limited physical activities. The study is primarily concerned with specifying similarities and differences in correlates of vigorous exercise and walking among illness/injury groups in comparison to a healthy sample. Subjects in the analysis (N = 2,053) were drawn from a multiwave mailed survey of a probability sampling of the adult population residing in households in San Diego, California. Although differences were found in correlates of walking and vigorous exercise among the groups, self-efficacy, the belief that one is able to perform specific activities, was the most powerful and statistically significant correlate of both walking and vigorous exercise among all groups.
James Sallis, Melbourne F. Hovell, C. Richard Hofstetter, Patricia Faucher, John P. Elder, Judith H. Blanchard, Carl J. Caspersen, Kenneth E. Powell, Gregory M. Christenson
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