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    Home > Resource hub > Getting Australia Active III: 12 summaries

Getting Australia Active III: 12 summaries

Summaries on each of the eight policy domains and key supporting chapters in the report Getting Australia Active III: A systems approach to physical activity for policy makers.
  • The built environment domain and physical activity

    Summary

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  • The co-benefits of physical activity promotion

    Summary

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  • Community-wide programs and physical activity

    Summary

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  • The education domain and physical activity

    Summary

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  • Mass media-based social marketing campaigns for physical activity

    Summary

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  • Measuring physical activity at the population level

    Summary

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  • The primary and secondary healthcare domain and physical activity

    Summary

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  • The sport and recreation domain and physical activity

    Summary

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  • Whole-of-systems approaches to physical activity

    Summary

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  • The transport domain and physical activity

    Summary

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  • The workplace domain and physical activity

    Summary

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  • Getting Australia Active III: Summaries binder

    Summaries binder

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Associated content

  • Getting Australia Active III: A systems approach to physical activity for policy makers

    Resource category: Reports Reports
    Date 01 Apr 2020
  • The Australian Systems Approaches to Physical Activity (ASAPa) final project report

    Resource category: Reports Reports
    Date 30 Aug 2022
Details

DATE 1 Apr 2020

TYPE Reports

Topics

  • Physical activity ,

Prevention methodologies

  • Implementation, evaluation and scale up ,
  • Prevention in the health sector ,
  • Research impact and translation ,

Related projects

  • Employing physical activity to prevent chronic disease

    Graphic of active adults and children
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Acknowledgement of Country

The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Australians and Traditional Custodians of the lands where we live, learn, and work.

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Funding Partners

The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre is funded by the NHMRC, Australian Government Department of Health, ACT Health, Cancer Council Australia, NSW Ministry of Health, Wellbeing SA, Tasmanian Department of Health, and VicHealth. The Australian Government also contributed through the Medical Research Future Fund. Queensland Health became a financial contributor in 2022. The Prevention Centre is administered by the Sax Institute.

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