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Australian Health Review Australian Health Review Society
Journal of the Australian Healthcare & Hospitals Association

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This article has been peer reviewed and accepted for publication. It is in production and has not been edited, so may differ from the final published form.

Private car travel is the dominant form of transport to work for healthcare workers across Greater Western X: A short report on a large travel survey

Soumya Mazumdar, Bin Jalaludin, David Surplice, Stephen Conaty, Kim Jobburn, Linda Stanbury, Helen Ryan, Josephine Chow

Abstract

Objective: Health Care Workers (HCWs) form an essential segment of the workforce. Investigating active commuting within the workforce, especially HCWs, is important. However, limited research exists in this domain. Methods: This study, conducted under the auspices of the Greater Western X Health Partnership, a collaboration between three western X local health districts, surveyed over 5,000 HCWs to explore their commuting behaviours and attitudes towards commuting. Results: We found that almost three quarters (72.8%) of HCWs drove a private vehicle to work, usually parking on site. Less than 5% of respondents used carpooling or active transport methods like walking or cycling. Distance was stated as a critical barrier to walking or cycling, though road safety and security concerns were also important. Time constraints, as well as, the lack of public transport services, were considered barriers to utilising public transport. The survey results highlight the constraints preventing the widespread adoption of non-car commuting modes and should inform decision-making on incentivizing healthy commuting options among HCWs. Conclusions: HCWs in a metropolitan Global North context such as western X predominantly drive to work, with only 16.9% using public transport or walking/cycling with various barriers being cited as reasons. We recommend further efforts to develop effective interventions for promoting active commuting among HCWs.

AH24229  Accepted 16 April 2025

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