Frequency of regular walking among Croatian adults.
Slaven KrtalićHelena KrižanSanja Musić MilanovićPublished in: Arhiv za higijenu rada i toksikologiju (2024)
The aim of this study was to determine the share of Croatian adults who walk 210 min or more a week and to explore the relationship between regular walking and demographic factors, health-related behaviours, and chronic non-communicable diseases/conditions. To this end, we used the EHIS-PAQ questionnaire and collected self-reported data on minutes spent walking during a typical week from a total of 3,496 respondents. The data were additionally analysed by gender, age, education, residence (urban/rural), counties and regions, smoking, other types of physical activity, and diseases/chronic conditions. The results show that, overall, 40.9 % of the adult Croatian population walks 210 or more minutes a week, with the largest share found among those from the Lika-Senj County (76.8 %), those who spend 300 min or more weekly on health-enhancing (non-work-related) aerobic physical activity (57.6 %), those who reported having diabetes (49.3 %), and those aged 65-74 years (44.7 %). Despite its limitations, our study gives a valuable insight into the frequency and factors determining healthy walking habits in a representative sample of Croatian adults and provides grounds for further research.
Keyphrases
- physical activity
- healthcare
- lower limb
- mental health
- type diabetes
- public health
- electronic health record
- cardiovascular disease
- big data
- body mass index
- randomized controlled trial
- adipose tissue
- placebo controlled
- risk assessment
- machine learning
- deep learning
- drug induced
- social media
- insulin resistance
- smoking cessation
- glycemic control
- weight loss
- health promotion
- artificial intelligence