Psychological and Social Barriers to Physical Activity Perceived by Female College Students

Authors

  • Amber Bashir Assistant Professor, Health and Physical Education Govt Associate College 98/NB Sargodha. Email: Amberbashir74@mail.com
  • Asim Akbar Department of Sports Sciences and Physical Education Muslim Youth University Islamabad. Email: asimakbar4all@gmail.com
  • Shumila Irum PhD Scholar Department of Physical Education and Sports Sciences Gomal University, D.I. Khan. Email: shumila.sonia@gmail.com
  • Raja Asim Ur Rehman Department of Physical Education and Sports Sciences Government College University Lahore. Email: rehmanasim05@gmail.com
  • Nasir Hussain Department of Physical Education and Sports Sciences Government College University Lahore. Email: nasir.hussain@gcu.edu.pk
  • Dr. Saddam Akbar Department of Physical Education and Sports Sciences Government College University Lahore. Corresponding Author Email: justsaddamakbar4@gmail.com

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63163/jpehss.v3i4.790

Abstract

Physical activity plays an important role in promoting healthy lifestyles. It helps with physical, mental, social and emotional health.  Present study investigates psychological and social barriers to physical activity perceived by female college students. Primary aim is to examine psychological and social barriers as predictors of physical activity. Psychological predictors include depression, anxiety and stress and to measure these Depression anxiety and Stress scale (DASS-21), and social predictors include parenting influence measured by Parental Involvement in Sport Questionnaire (PISQ), body image measured by Adolescents Body Image Satisfaction Scale and social support measured by Multidimensional perceived social support scale (MSPSS) and physical activity was accessed using Exercise Benefits/Barriers Scale (EBBS). Results revealed that psychological predictors (depression, anxiety and stress) are negative predictors of physical activity and social predictors’ parental influence and social support are positive predictors of physical activity and body image significantly negatively predicts physical activity.

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Published

2025-11-05

How to Cite

Psychological and Social Barriers to Physical Activity Perceived by Female College Students. (2025). Physical Education, Health and Social Sciences, 3(4), 238-247. https://doi.org/10.63163/jpehss.v3i4.790