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Changes in commuting behaviours in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the UK

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posted on 2022-06-01, 15:45 authored by DM Harrington, M Hadjiconstantinou

Background

The UK Government restrictions on non-essential work in response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic forced millions of working aged-adults into an unplanned lifestyle change. We present data on changes in commuting behaviour in response to COVID-19 and describe the facilitators and barriers to switching commuting behaviours, with a specific focus on cycling and walking.


Methods

An online survey queried individuals’ transport mode to/from work before and when becoming aware of COVID-19, when restrictions were in place and the transport mode they may use once restrictions are lifted. Free-form text responses were collected on why they may switch to a sustainable commute mode in the future and what would help/allow them to achieve this. Quantitative and qualitative data on those who commuted by car (single occupant) and public transport (bus/rail/park & ride) were analysed and presented separately.


Results

Overall, 725 car and public transport commuters responded; 72.4% were car commuters and 27.6% were public transport commuters before COVID-19. Of the car commuters, 81.9% may continue travelling by car once restrictions are lifted while 3.6% and 6.5% might change to walking and cycling, respectively. Of the public transport commuters, 49.0% might switch modes. From the free-form text responses three themes were identified: (a) perceived behavioural control towards cycling and walking (infrastructure and safety of roads, distance, weather) (b) key motivators to encourage a switch to cycling and walking (provision to support cycling, personal and environmental benefits); (c) the demands of current lifestyle (job requirements, family and lifestyle commitments).


Conclusion

These UK data show how the COVID-19 pandemic has been an “external shock” causing some individuals to reassess their commuting mode. This provides an opportunity for theory-based behaviour change interventions tackling motivations, barriers and beliefs towards changing commute mode.

Funding

University of Leicester and Leicester Diabetes Centre

NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre

History

Citation

Journal of Transport & Health Volume 24, March 2022, 101313

Author affiliation

Diabetes Research Centre, College of Life Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Journal of Transport and Health

Volume

24

Pagination

101313

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

2214-1405

Acceptance date

2021-12-03

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2023-06-08

Language

eng

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