Barriers and Enablers for Physical Activity in Culturally Deaf Adults: A Qualitative Thematic Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Barriers
3.1.1. Physical Barriers
‘I was involved in a deaf football team but now I am too old for that.’
‘I work as a teacher, if I have time at home I just want to relax.’
‘[I] didn’t want to go to the gym, go swimming, but this [is] mainly costly and the time.’
‘My parents, them, my mum can’t walk, she struggles, she can’t travel independently, she can’t get the bus, so she’s stuck, so she relies on my dad to drive.’
3.1.2. Lack of Deaf Awareness and Deaf Spaces
‘I went to the gym. I went there and there’s a bit of a club, but I feel like I’m left out because they’re all talking and that’s a massive barrier.’
‘But for deaf, there’s nothing. There’s hardly anything there. It’s really gone.’
‘Deaf sports you know, fantastic, really fantastic. I remember when I was small I lived in Nottingham, at Deaf Club and I’d come all the time and I’d see trophies lined up on the walls, challenges in people, deaf professionals, cricket, football, all sorts of sports and I would look and think that’s something I want to get involved in but now deaf clubs are reduced.’
3.2. Enablers
3.2.1. Group/Social Support
‘And having a partner who’s going to go with me, you need a gym buddy. You need someone to like, bring you along and encourage you to go. That’s what you need.’
[When discussing an inclusive group] ‘Some deaf and some hearing are there, but they both sign and it’s quite nice to have that group and it’s very relaxed to do that.’
‘Obviously, they’d have to be deaf. You can’t have one deaf with an interpreter [it] has to be [a] group of deaf individuals.’
3.2.2. Personal Motivations
‘So, sport really helps, it’s really good for your mental health as well, connectivity [wise].’
‘Before I went swimming in because that was my aim to, you know, wanted to wear that dress or I’ve got to be in that size 10 …You need something to aim for.’
3.2.3. Deaf-Led
‘So, Derby Local Organization, Deafinitely women, have you heard of that before? Yes. They’ve got some funding to set up different activities, a small cohort of women that come together and get involved. They do lots of physical activities. They’ve started that this summer and they’ve got a programme, so walking, yoga, outdoor activities, lots of different things.’
‘So definitely the sign language best. Yeah for me as well.’
3.2.4. Deaf Identity
‘It’s something they only provide for people who are hearing really they need to have something for the deaf community because we’re different…we have different needs…we’re culturally different.’
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
PA | Physical activity |
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Themes | Sub-Themes |
---|---|
| 1.1 Physical Barriers 1.2 Lack of deaf awareness and space |
| 2.1 Group/social support 2.2 Personal Motivations 2.3 Deaf-led activities 2.4 Deaf Identity |
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Barker, A.B.; Irons, J.Y.; Roscoe, C.M.P.; Pringle, A. Barriers and Enablers for Physical Activity in Culturally Deaf Adults: A Qualitative Thematic Analysis. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22, 777. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22050777
Barker AB, Irons JY, Roscoe CMP, Pringle A. Barriers and Enablers for Physical Activity in Culturally Deaf Adults: A Qualitative Thematic Analysis. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2025; 22(5):777. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22050777
Chicago/Turabian StyleBarker, Alex B., J. Yoon Irons, Clare M. P. Roscoe, and Andy Pringle. 2025. "Barriers and Enablers for Physical Activity in Culturally Deaf Adults: A Qualitative Thematic Analysis" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 22, no. 5: 777. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22050777
APA StyleBarker, A. B., Irons, J. Y., Roscoe, C. M. P., & Pringle, A. (2025). Barriers and Enablers for Physical Activity in Culturally Deaf Adults: A Qualitative Thematic Analysis. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 22(5), 777. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22050777