The role of health and wellbeing in shaping local park experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic

IF 3.6 3区 管理学 Q1 HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM
Lauren A. Ferguson , Michael D. Ferguson , Krista Rodrigues , Darrick Evensen , Alexander R. Caraynoff , Kimberly Persson , Josephine B. Porter , Stephen Eisenhaure
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Parks and protected areas (PPAs) serve a critical role in society as natural reprieves for restoring both mental and physical health. The restorative power of nature was even more evident during the COVID-19 pandemic, when visitation to local PPAs increased dramatically. Resource managers within local PPAs are growing concerned regarding the influence of increasing recreation visitation levels upon health, wellbeing, and overall visitor experience quality. This study examined the influence of social, ecological, and situational factors on visitors' health, wellbeing, and satisfaction in a local PPA setting in New England. On-site intercept surveys were conducted with local PPA visitors from September 2020 to August 2021 (n = 539) across both spatial and temporal scales. Structural equation modeling and binary logistic regression analyses suggest that social, situational, and ecological factors were significant predictors of visitor health, wellbeing, and overall satisfaction. Health outcomes (e.g., health improvement) fully mediated the relationship between situational factors (e.g., signage, COVID-19 visitation) and satisfaction and partially mediated the relationship between social factors (e.g., crowding, place attachment) and satisfaction. While ecological factors (e.g., trail and resource degradation) had no direct relationship with health outcomes, they showed a strong negative relationship with visitor satisfaction. Study findings suggest that as local PPA visitation increased during the pandemic, health outcomes also increased significantly, serving to mitigate certain negative impacts, and ultimately enhance overall experience quality. These findings lend themselves to an integration of health and wellbeing, visitor use management, and social-ecological systems conceptual frameworks and provide critical theoretical and managerial insights.

Management implications

This study found that as local park and protected area visitation (PPA) increased during the pandemic, health and wellbeing outcomes also increased significantly, serving to mitigate certain negative impacts, and ultimately enhance overall experience quality. Results indicate additional signage, increasing sense of place, and reducing ecological impacts should be top priorities for resource managers. Finally, study findings validate the critical role that local PPAs and resource managers play in providing opportunities for enhanced health and wellness, particularly during a global pandemic, epitomizing the mantra healthy parks and healthy people.

在 COVID-19 大流行期间,健康和福祉在塑造当地公园体验中的作用
公园和保护区(PPAs)作为恢复身心健康的天然疗养地,在社会中发挥着至关重要的作用。在 COVID-19 大流行期间,当地公园和保护区的游览人数急剧增加,大自然的恢复能力更加明显。当地 PPA 的资源管理人员越来越关注日益增长的娱乐参观水平对健康、福祉和整体游客体验质量的影响。本研究考察了新英格兰当地 PPA 环境中社会、生态和情景因素对游客健康、幸福和满意度的影响。在 2020 年 9 月至 2021 年 8 月期间,对当地 PPA 的游客(n = 539)进行了跨空间和时间尺度的现场拦截调查。结构方程建模和二元逻辑回归分析表明,社会、情景和生态因素是游客健康、福祉和总体满意度的重要预测因素。健康结果(如健康改善)完全调节了情景因素(如标识、COVID-19 参观人数)与满意度之间的关系,并部分调节了社会因素(如拥挤程度、地方依恋)与满意度之间的关系。虽然生态因素(如步道和资源退化)与健康结果没有直接关系,但它们与游客满意度之间存在强烈的负相关关系。研究结果表明,随着大流行病期间当地 PPA 访问量的增加,健康结果也显著增加,从而减轻了某些负面影响,并最终提高了整体体验质量。这些研究结果有助于整合健康与福利、游客使用管理和社会生态系统概念框架,并提供了重要的理论和管理启示。 这项研究发现,随着大流行病期间当地公园和保护区游客量的增加,健康与福利成果也显著增加,起到了减轻某些负面影响的作用,并最终提高了整体体验质量。研究结果表明,增加标识、增强地方感和减少生态影响应成为资源管理者的首要任务。最后,研究结果验证了当地公园管理机构和资源管理者在提供增进健康和福祉的机会方面所发挥的关键作用,尤其是在全球大流行病期间,这也是健康公园和健康人群口号的缩影。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
5.30%
发文量
84
期刊介绍: Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism offers a dedicated outlet for research relevant to social sciences and natural resources. The journal publishes peer reviewed original research on all aspects of outdoor recreation planning and management, covering the entire spectrum of settings from wilderness to urban outdoor recreation opportunities. It also focuses on new products and findings in nature based tourism and park management. JORT is an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary journal, articles may focus on any aspect of theory, method, or concept of outdoor recreation research, planning or management, and interdisciplinary work is especially welcome, and may be of a theoretical and/or a case study nature. Depending on the topic of investigation, articles may be positioned within one academic discipline, or draw from several disciplines in an integrative manner, with overarching relevance to social sciences and natural resources. JORT is international in scope and attracts scholars from all reaches of the world to facilitate the exchange of ideas. As such, the journal enhances understanding of scientific knowledge, empirical results, and practitioners'' needs. Therefore in JORT each article is accompanied by an executive summary, written by the editors or authors, highlighting the planning and management relevant aspects of the article.
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