%0 Journal Article %T Environmental factors influencing older adults¡¯ walking for transportation: a study using walk-along interviews %A Jelle Van Cauwenberg %A Veerle Van Holle %A Dorien Simons %A Riet Deridder %A Peter Clarys %A Liesbet Goubert %A Jack Nasar %A Jo Salmon %A Ilse De Bourdeaudhuij %A Benedicte Deforche %J International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1479-5868-9-85 %X Purposeful convenience sampling was used to recruit 57 older adults residing in urban or semi-urban areas. Walk-along interviews to and from a destination (e.g. a shop) located within a 15 minutes¡¯ walk from the participants¡¯ home were conducted. Content analysis was performed using NVivo 9 software (QSR International). An inductive approach was used to derive categories and subcategories from the data.Data were categorized in the following categories and subcategories: access to facilities (shops & services, public transit, connectivity), walking facilities (sidewalk quality, crossings, legibility, benches), traffic safety (busy traffic, behavior of other road users), familiarity, safety from crime (physical factors, other persons), social contacts, aesthetics (buildings, natural elements, noise & smell, openness, decay) and weather.The findings indicate that to promote walking for transportation a neighborhood should provide good access to shops and services, well-maintained walking facilities, aesthetically appealing places, streets with little traffic and places for social interaction. In addition, the neighborhood environment should evoke feelings of familiarity and safety from crime. Future quantitative studies should investigate if (changes in) these environmental factors relate to (changes in) older adults¡¯ walking for transportation. %K Physical environment %K Physical activity %K Walking for transportation %K Older adults %K Qualitative study %K Walk-along interviews %U http://www.ijbnpa.org/content/9/1/85/abstract