BMC Public Health (Jan 2022)

Barriers to initiating and maintaining participation in parkrun

  • L. J. Reece,
  • K. Owen,
  • M. Graney,
  • C. Jackson,
  • M. Shields,
  • G. Turner,
  • C. Wellington

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-022-12546-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Interventions that increase population physical activity are required to promote health and wellbeing. parkrun delivers community-based, 5 km events worldwide yet 43% who register never participate in a parkrun event. This research had two objectives; i) explore the demographics of people who register for parkrun in United Kingdom, Australia, Ireland, and don’t initiate or maintain participation ii) understand the barriers to participating in parkrun amongst these people. Mandatory data at parkrun registration provided demographic characteristics of parkrun registrants. A bespoke online survey distributed across the three countries captured the reasons for not participating or only participating once. Of 680,255 parkrun registrants between 2017 and 19, 293,542 (43%) did not participate in any parkrun events and 147,148 (22%) only participated in one parkrun event. Females, 16–34 years and physically inactive were more likely to not participate or not return to parkrun. Inconvenient start time was the most frequently reported barrier to participating, with females more likely than males to report the psychological barrier of feeling too unfit to participate. Co-creating strategies with and for people living with a chronic disease, women, young adults, and physically inactive people, could increase physical activity participation within parkrun.

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