| Literature DB >> 22899944 |
L B Robertson1, C Ward Thompson, P Aspinall, C Millington, C McAdam, N Mutrie.
Abstract
We investigated the relationship between walking levels and the local neighbourhood physical environment during the Walking for Wellbeing in the West (WWW) randomised pedometer-based community intervention. Walking activity was recorded as step counts at baseline (n = 76), and at 3 months (n = 57), 6 months (n = 54), and 12 months (n = 45) post-intervention. Objective physical environment data were obtained from GIS datasets and street surveys conducted using the SWAT audit tool. Sixty-nine environment variables were reduced to eight environment factors using principal axis factoring, and the relationship between environment factors and (i) step counts, and (ii) the change in step counts relative to baseline, was examined using hierarchical multiple linear regression, controlling for age, gender, income, and deprivation. Five environment factors were significant predictors of step counts, but none were significant predictors of the change in step counts relative to baseline. None of the demographic variables included in the analysis were significant predictors at any stage of the study. Total variance explained by the environment ranged from 6% (P < 0.05) to 34% (P < 0.01), with lowest levels during the initial stages of the study. The physical environment appears to have influenced walking levels during the WWW intervention, and to have contributed to the maintenance of walking levels post-intervention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22899944 PMCID: PMC3414080 DOI: 10.1155/2012/974786
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Environ Public Health ISSN: 1687-9805
Figure 1Location of the study area. Major green spaces within the study area are highlighted with a green border (Knightswood Park, Dawsholm Park, Victoria Park, Glasgow Botanics, and Kelvingrove Park). © Crown Copyright/database right 2008. An Ordnance Survey/EDINA supplied service.
Figure 2Participant locations and Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) zones.
Environment variables included in the analysis (n = 69), arranged according to theme and element after Pikora et al. [25]. GIS data variables (i.e. those not derived from the street audit data) are shown in italic (n = 13), and variables that were included in the factor analysis are shown in bold (n = 58). Variables which are weighted scores are indicated with an asterisk. Unless otherwise stated (e.g. %, number, mean), the values used in the analysis were the proportion of segments in the 400 m radius neighbourhood zone where the environmental feature in question was present.
| Theme | Functional | Safety | Aesthetic | Destination | |||||||
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| Elements | Walking surface | Streets | Traffic | Permeability | Personal | Traffic | Streetscape | Views | Facilities | ||
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| Items | Path continuity |
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| Bus stop | ||
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| Coach stop | ||
| Underpass |
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| Train station | ||
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| Zebra crossing |
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| Pool |
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| Bike locker |
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| Golf course | ||||||
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| Bike rack |
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aAt either end of the segment.
bAfter Frank et al. [21].
cRecreation facility other than an indoor fitness facility, park, playground, pool, golf course, sports/playing field, sports track or tennis court.
∗Variable is a weighted score.
Figure 3Step counts at each stage of the study. Whiskers are 10th and 90th percentiles and the dashed line is the mean.
Figure 4The relative change in steps from baseline at each stage of the study (NB: axis is natural log, with a constant of 100 added to all step counts). Whiskers are 10th and 90th percentiles and the dashed line is the mean. The dotted line at e 4.6 represents 0% change.
Rotated factor matrix for environment variables (n = 38), based on Principle Axis Factoring and a varimax rotation (with Kaiser normalisation). Only retained factors and loadings > 0.5 are shown. GIS variables (i.e. those not derived from street audit data) are shown in italic, and variables which are weighted averages are indicated with an asterisk.
| Physical environment variable | Factor loadings | |||||||
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| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | |
| Green space and recreation facilities | Commercial and residential land use mix | Dangerous and busy roads | Pathway features other than safety | Pathway safety features | Roads and bus stops | Indoor fitness facilities and traffic calming features | Traffic signals and pedestrian signage | |
| Park | .924 | |||||||
| Recreation facility: othera | .899 | |||||||
| Playground | .652 | |||||||
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| .631 | .511 | ||||||
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| .629 | |||||||
| Recreation facilities (mean no. of) | .608 | .550 | ||||||
| Nature views | .532 | |||||||
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| .924 | |||||||
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| −.877 | |||||||
| Parking provision∗ | .693 | |||||||
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| .644 | −.501 | ||||||
| Hedge % coverage∗ | −.606 | −.514 | ||||||
| Cul de sac or perm. street closingc | .540 | |||||||
| Path: none | .531 | |||||||
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| −.511 | .506 | ||||||
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| .900 | |||||||
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| .869 | |||||||
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| .791 | |||||||
| Garden maintenance∗ | .675 | |||||||
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| .504 | .541 | ||||||
| Pedestrian signage | −.536 | .510 | ||||||
| Dog fouling∗ | −.534 | |||||||
| Path material type∗ | .865 | |||||||
| Path material natural | .860 | |||||||
| Sports/playing field or tennis crt. | .693 | |||||||
| Hill views | −.646 | |||||||
| Road names visible | .601 | .528 | ||||||
| Street closing w. walking access thr. | .519 | |||||||
| Path well lit | .847 | |||||||
| Raised kerb | .797 | |||||||
| Path distance from kerb∗ | .517 | .591 | ||||||
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| .580 | |||||||
| Median refuge | .919 | |||||||
| Car lanes (mean no. of) | .798 | |||||||
| Fitness facility: indoor | .881 | |||||||
| Speed humps | .567 | .643 | ||||||
| Kerb extension | .553 | |||||||
| Traffic signals | .710 | |||||||
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aRecreation facility other than an indoor fitness facility, park, playground, pool, golf course, sports/playing field, sports track, or tennis court.
bAfter Frank et al. [21].
cAt either end of the street segment.
Multiple linear regression analysis predicting step counts at baseline and at each monitoring period postintervention.
| Baseline2 | 3 months2 | 6 months | 12 months | |||||||||
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| b | SE b |
| b | SE b |
| b | SE b |
| b | SE b |
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| SIMD rank | ||||||||||||
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| Green space and recreation facilities ( | −12667.3 | 5411.4 | −.34∗ | |||||||||
| Commercial and residential land use mix ( | 1896.3 | 582.7 | .40∗ | 1259.5 | 622.4 | .30† | ||||||
| Dangerous and busy roads ( | −23.7 | 11.2 | −.25∗ | −28.0 | 13.7 | −.28∗ | −6376.0 | 2574.6 | −.31∗ | |||
| Pathway features other than safety ( | ||||||||||||
| Pathway safety features ( | ||||||||||||
| Roads and bus stops ( | ||||||||||||
| Indoor fitness fac. and traffic calming feat. ( | 5576.3 | 2512.4 | .27∗ | |||||||||
| Traffic signals and pedestrian signage ( | −1295.7 | 531.7 | −.30∗ | |||||||||
| Constant | 44.3 | 18.0 | 55.1 | 22.1 | −12709.5 | 6992.2 | 39003.28 | 12478.1 | ||||
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| Model / Step 2 | 0.06 (0.05)∗ | 0.08 (0.06)∗ | 0.343 (0.283)∗∗ | 0.19 (0.15)∗ | ||||||||
| Model | 0.038 | 0.046 | 0.001 | 0.018 | ||||||||
1Natural log transform; 2Square root transform
*<0.05. **<0.01.
†Borderline significant, P = 0.05.