Do Relationships Between Environmental Attributes and Recreational Walking Vary According to Area-Level Socioeconomic Status?

被引:0
作者
Takemi Sugiyama
Natasha J. Howard
Catherine Paquet
Neil T. Coffee
Anne W. Taylor
Mark Daniel
机构
[1] University of South Australia,Spatial Epidemiology and Evaluation Research Group, Sansom Institute for Health Research & School of Population Health
[2] Research Centre of the Douglas Mental Health University Institute,Discipline of Medicine
[3] The University of Adelaide,Department of Medicine, St. Vincent’s Hospital
[4] The University of Melbourne,undefined
[5] South Australian Health & Medical Research Institute,undefined
来源
Journal of Urban Health | 2015年 / 92卷
关键词
Physical activity; Neighborhood environment; Walkability; Inequality; Effect modification;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Residents of areas with lower socioeconomic status (SES) are known to be less physically active during leisure time. Neighborhood walkability has been shown to be related to recreational walking equally in low and high SES areas. This cross-sectional study tested whether associations of specific environmental attributes, measured objectively and subjectively, with walking for recreation were moderated by area-level SES. The data of the North West Adelaide Health Study collected in 2007 (n = 1500, mean age 57) were used. Self-reported walking frequency was the outcome of the study. Environmental exposure measures included objectively measured walkability components (residential density, intersection density, land use mix, and net retail area ratio) and perceived attributes (access to destinations, neighborhood esthetics, walking infrastructure, traffic/barriers, and crime safety). Participants’ suburbs were categorized into low and high SES areas using an indicator of socioeconomic disadvantage. Low SES areas had lower scores in residential density, neighborhood esthetics, walking infrastructure, traffic/barriers, and crime safety. Recreational walking was associated with residential density, access to destinations, esthetics, traffic/barriers, and crime safety. Effect modification was observed for two attributes (out of nine): residential density was associated with walking only in low SES areas, while walking infrastructure was associated with walking only in high SES areas. The associations of neighborhood environmental attributes with recreational walking were largely consistent across SES groups. However, low SES areas were disadvantaged in most perceived environmental attributes related to recreational walking. Improving such attributes in low SES neighborhoods may help close socioeconomic disparities in leisure time physical activity.
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页码:253 / 264
页数:11
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