“Thumb Exercise”: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of Psychosocial Factors Encouraging Inactive Adults to Engage with Their Smartphones Rather than Physical Activity

Q1 Medicine Physical Activity and Health Pub Date : 2020-04-09 DOI:10.5334/paah.50
Tallulah Sara Hedges, G. Garip
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Abstract

Background: Physical inactivity accounts for up to 1.6 million deaths each year. With UK adults spending approximately eleven times longer using their smartphones than exercising, research suggests that frequent smartphone use is linked to poor physical fitness. Previous research on the psychosocial influences of both problem smartphone use, and physical activity barriers and facilitators exist, however insight into the psychosocial underpinnings of why inactive individuals choose to engage with their smartphones rather than physical activity is understudied. Aims: This study provides a qualitative exploration of the psychosocial factors that encourage inactive adults to engage with their smartphones rather than physical activity. Methods: Thirteen (female = 10) participants aged between 18 and 39 completed an online qualitative survey. The subjective experiences and perceptions from participants’ survey responses were analysed using interpretative phenomenological analysis, with a phenomenological epistemological approach. Results: Three themes were identified: the first theme identified that the psychosocial influence of smartphone engagement was to escape unpleasant realities; the second theme depicts that the psychosocial barrier of physical activity engagement was perceptions in relation to the financial and task-oriented costs that physical activity incurs; the third theme captured that social support necessities are being fulfilled through smartphone communication, therefore as a counterpart, physical activity is deemed to be a desolate operation. Conclusions: The findings from this study provide recommendations that harness social support and smartphone capabilities for motivating inactive adults to maintain physically active lifestyles.
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“拇指运动”:鼓励不活跃的成年人使用智能手机而不是体育活动的心理社会因素的解释性现象学分析
背景:不运动导致每年多达160万人死亡。英国成年人使用智能手机的时间大约是锻炼时间的11倍,研究表明,频繁使用智能手机与身体素质差有关。先前关于问题智能手机的使用以及体育活动障碍和促进者的心理社会影响的研究是存在的,然而,对为什么不活跃的人选择使用智能手机而不是体育活动的心理社会基础的深入研究还不够。目的:这项研究对鼓励不活跃的成年人使用智能手机而不是体育活动的心理社会因素进行了定性探索。方法:13名年龄在18-39岁之间的参与者(女性=10)完成了一项在线定性调查。使用解释性现象学分析和现象学认识论方法分析了参与者调查反应中的主观体验和感知。结果:确定了三个主题:第一个主题确定了智能手机参与的心理社会影响是为了逃避令人不快的现实;第二个主题描述了体育活动参与的心理社会障碍是对体育活动所产生的经济和任务导向成本的感知;第三个主题捕捉到,通过智能手机通信来满足社会支持的必要性,因此,与之相对应,体育活动被认为是一种荒凉的操作。结论:这项研究的结果提供了一些建议,利用社会支持和智能手机的能力来激励不活跃的成年人保持身体活跃的生活方式。
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来源期刊
Physical Activity and Health
Physical Activity and Health Medicine-Rehabilitation
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
15 weeks
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