| Literature DB >> 29351286 |
Grainne O'Donoghue1,2, Aileen Kennedy2, Anna Puggina3, Katina Aleksovska3, Christoph Buck4, Con Burns5, Greet Cardon6, Angela Carlin7, Donatella Ciarapica8, Marco Colotto3, Giancarlo Condello9, Tara Coppinger5, Cristina Cortis10, Sara D'Haese6, Marieke De Craemer6, Andrea Di Blasio11, Sylvia Hansen12, Licia Iacoviello13, Johann Issartel2, Pascal Izzicupo11, Lina Jaeschke14, Martina Kanning15, Fiona Ling7, Agnes Luzak16, Giorgio Napolitano11, Julie-Anne Nazare17, Camille Perchoux17, Caterina Pesce9, Tobias Pischon14, Angela Polito8, Alessandra Sannella10, Holger Schulz16, Chantal Simon17, Rhoda Sohun7, Astrid Steinbrecher14, Wolfgang Schlicht12, Ciaran MacDonncha7, Laura Capranica9, Stefania Boccia3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To date, the scientific literature on socioeconomic correlates and determinants of physical activity behaviours has been dispersed throughout a number of systematic reviews, often focusing on one factor (e.g. education or parental income) in one specific age group (e.g. pre-school children or adults). The aim of this umbrella review is to provide a comprehensive and systematic overview of the scientific literature from previously conducted research by summarising and synthesising the importance and strength of the evidence related to socioeconomic correlates and determinants of PA behaviours across the life course.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29351286 PMCID: PMC5774703 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0190737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Search strategy: Key words used for the literature search.
| Set | Search terms |
|---|---|
| #1 | “physical activit*” OR “physical exercise*” OR sport OR “motor activit*” OR “locomotor activit*” OR athletic* OR fitness OR “physical movement*” OR “physical performance*” OR “aerobic exercise*” OR “physical effort*” OR “physical exertion*” |
| #2 | determinant OR determinants OR correlator OR correlators OR mediator OR mediators OR moderator OR moderators OR contributor OR contributors OR factor OR factors OR association OR modifier OR modifiers OR confounder OR confounders OR pattern OR patterns OR predictor* |
| #3 | demographic* OR motivation OR cognition OR emotion* OR attitude* OR “self-perception” OR “self-confidence” OR “self-efficacy” OR competence OR reward* OR success* OR challenge* OR knowledge OR belief* OR “personal trait*” OR “body image” OR satisfaction OR “time availability” OR “perceived environment” OR family OR peer* OR school* OR leader* OR coach* OR group* OR “climate” OR network* OR employment OR retirement OR “educational level” OR SES OR “socioeconomic status” OR “local identity” OR “national identity” OR value* OR tradition* OR “social expectation*” OR “social trend*” OR “social barrier*” OR “availability of tool*” OR “availability of service*” OR “access to tool*” OR “access to service*” OR neighborhood OR “community route*” OR “school environment” OR “work environment” OR architecture OR urbanization OR transport OR traffic OR “facilit* in public space*” OR advertisement OR “availability of sport club*” OR “availability of fitness center*” OR advocacy OR lobbying OR “corporate social responsibility” OR “physical activity promotion initiative*” OR legislation OR health OR education OR tourism OR environment OR “urban planning” OR transport* OR sport OR sports OR culture OR dance OR theater OR “gender mainstreaming” OR “social inclusion” OR “fiscal measure*” OR program* OR plan OR plans OR communication OR media OR guideline* |
| #4 | “systematic literature review” OR “meta-analysis” |
Importance of a determinant.
| Category of importance | Definition |
|---|---|
| The variable has been found to be positively associated in all reviews, without exception. This could mean that only one review has included a particular variable, and showed that this was a significant positive correlate and/or reported a (non)-significant effect size larger than 0.30, but it could also mean that a number of reviews were conducted that included this variable and all of them concluded that the variable was significantly positively related to the particular behavioral outcome. | |
| This implies that > 75% of the available reviews concluded the variable to be positively related, or the separate reviews report that 75% or more of the original studies concluded the factor to be positively related. This could therefore mean that only one review has included a particular variable, and showed that this was a significant positive correlate in > 75% of studies. But it could also mean that a number of reviews were executed towards this variable and most, but not all, concluded that the variable was positively related to the particular behavioral outcome. | |
| The variable has been found to be related and/or reported a (non)-significant effect size larger than 0.30 in some reviews (25% to 75% of available reviews or of the studies reviewed in these reviews), but not in others. The direction of the relationship can be either positive or negative. This could mean that only one review has included a particular variable, and showed ‘mixed findings’, but it could also mean that results are mixed across reviews. | |
| The variable was found to have no association. It scored (00) if all reviews, without exception reported a null hypothesis | |
| This implies that > 75% of the available reviews concluded the variable to be negatively related, or the separate reviews report that 75% or more of the original studies concluded the factor to be negatively related. This could therefore mean that only one review has included a particular variable, and showed that this was a significant negative correlate in > 75% of studies. But it could also mean that a number of reviews were executed towards this variable and most, but not all, concluded that the variable was negatively related to the particular behavioral outcome. | |
Criteria for grading evidence.
| Strength of evidence | Grading Criteria |
|---|---|
| Evidence based on studies of determinants showing consistent associations between the variable and the behavioral outcome. The available evidence is based on a substantial number of studies including longitudinal observational studies and where relevant, experimental studies of sufficient size, duration and quality showing consistent effects. Specifically, the grading criteria include evidence from more than one study type and evidence from at least two independent cohort studies should be available, and strong and plausible experimental evidence. | |
| Evidence based on studies of determinants showing fairly consistent associations between the variable and the behavioral outcome, but there are shortcomings in the available evidence or some evidence to the contrary, which precludes a more definite judgment. Shortcomings in the evidence may be any of the following: insufficient duration of studies, insufficient studies available (but evidence from at least two independent cohort studies or five case-control studies should be available), inadequate sample sizes, incomplete follow-up. | |
| Evidence based mainly on findings from cross sectional studies. Insufficient longitudinal observational studies or experimental studies are available or results are inconsistent. More well-designed studies of determinants are required to support the tentative associations. | |
| Evidence based on findings of a few studies which are suggestive, but are insufficient to establish an association between the variable and the behavioral outcome. No evidence is available from longitudinal observational or experimental studies. More well-designed studies of determinants are required to support the tentative associations. |
Fig 1Flowchart of the literature research by database.
Characteristics of the included reviews.
| Author, Date | Number of eligible studies included in the umbrella review / total number of studies included in the review | Continent/s of included studies | Study design of included studies | Total sample size of included study (Sample range) | Age range or mean (years) of eligible studies | Gender (female, % range) of eligible studies | Year range of included studies |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barnett et al, 2012 (SLR) [ | 4/19 | North America (n = 2) Europe (n = 2) | Longitudinal (n = 2), Cross sectional (n = 2) | 699–11489 | 60–64 years | 27–53 | 2005–2009 |
| Beenackers et al, 2012 (SLR) [ | 131 | Europe (n = 131) | Designs not reported (n = 131) | 224 to 60938 | 18–65 years | 0–100 | 2000–2010 |
| Beets et al, 2010 (SLR) [ | 4/80 | North America (n = 4) | Cross-sectional (n = 3), Qualitative (n = 1) | 25–789 | < 18 years | 0–100 | 1970–2008 |
| Coble et al, 2006 (SLR) [ | 10/35 | North America (n = 10) | Cross-sectional (n = 10) | 127–2912 | >18 years | N.A. | 1990–2005 |
| Craggs et al, 2011 (SLR) [ | 15/46 | North America (n = 8), Europe (n = 5, Australia (n = 2) | Longitudinal (n = 15) | N/A | 4–18 years | N.A | Up to Nov 2010 |
| De Craemer et al, 2012 (SLR) [ | 9/43 | North America (n = 4), Australia (n = 3), Europe (n = 2) | Cross sectional (n = 8), Longitudinal (n = 1) | 46–5852 | 4–6 years | N.A. | Jan 1990- Sept 2010 |
| Edwardson et al, 2010 (SLR) [ | 1/96 | North America (n = 1) | Cross-sectional (n = 1) | 200–299 | 6-11years | 0–100 | Up to Sept 2009 |
| Ferreira et al, 2006 (SLR) [ | 33/150 | North America (n = 23,) Europe (n = 6), Oceania (n = 4) | Cross-sectional (n = 28), Longitudinal (n = 5) | 100–4999 | 3–18 years | N.A. | 1980–2005 |
| Gidlow et al, 2006 (SLR) [ | 33/33 | North America (n = 19), Europe (n = 10), Oceania (n = 4) | Cross-sectional (n = 29), Longitudinal (n = 4) | 220085 (n = 84–61239) | 16–70+ years | 0–100 | Up to Oct 2004 |
| Gustafson et al, 2006 (SLR) [ | 6/34 | North America (n = 4), Europe (n = 2) | Cross-sectional (n = 5), Longitudinal (n = 1) | 59–3254 | 3–18 years | 43–100 | 1985–1997 |
| Hinkley et al, 2008 (SLR) [ | 4/24 | North America (n = 2), Europe (n = 2) | Cross-sectional (n = 3), Longitudinal (n = 1) | 33–339 | 3–5 years | N.A. | 1980–2007 |
| Lu et al, 2017 (SLR) [ | 9/42 | China (n = 7) | Cross-sectional (n = 6), Longitudinal (n = 1) | 50–29139 | 3–18 years | N.A. | 2002–2016 |
| Olsen et al, 2013 (SLR) [ | 14/21 | North America (n = 14) | Cross-sectional (n = 5), mixed methods (n = 2), qualitative (n = 7) | 5789 (n = 2–2338) | >18 years | 100 | N.A. |
| Pavey et al, 2012 (SLR) [ | 1/20 | UK (n = 1) | Cross-sectional (n = 1) | 3568 | 9–92 years | 61.1 | Up to Oct 2009 |
| Ridgers et al, 2012 (SLR) [ | 3/53 | Australia (n = 1), Asia (n = 2) | Cross sectional (n = 3) | 3406 (n = 80–2946) | 4–13 | 32.5–56 | Jan 1990- Apr 2011 |
| Siddiq et al, 2011 (SLR) [ | 8/29 | North America (n = 8) | Qualitative (n = 8) | 414 (n = 19–92) | 19–85 | 48.3–100 | Up to May 2010 |
| Stanley et al, 2012 (SLR) [ | 2/22 | North America (n = 2) | Cross sectional (n = 2) | 9194 (n = 1556–7638) | 10–15 | 52.2–100 | 1999–2010 |
| Van der Horst et al, 2007 (SLR) [ | 8/57 | North America (n = 5), Australia (n = 1), Europe (n = 2) | Cross sectional (n = 8) | 49480 (n = 87–17766) | 11–24 | 47–100 | 1999–2004 |
| Wendel-Vos et al, 2007 (SLR) [ | 6/47 | North America (n = 4), Australia (n = 2) | Cross-sectional (n = 6) | 48268 (n = 350–29135) | >18 years | N.A. | 1980–2004 |
Quality assessment of the included reviews using the AMSTAR checklist.
| Author, Date [Ref] | Was an 'a priori' design provided? | Was there duplicate study selection and data extraction? | Was a comprehensive literature search performed? | Was the status of publication (i.e. grey literature) used as an inclusion criterion? | Was a list of studies (included and excluded) provided? | Were the characteristics of the included studies provided? | Was the scientific quality of the included studies assessed and documented? | Was the scientific quality of the included studies used appropriately in formulating conclusions? | Were the methods used to combine the findings of studies appropriate? | Was the likelihood of publication bias assessed? | Was the conflict of interest included? | Sum quality score | Quality of the review |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | C.A. | No | 7 | Moderate | |
| Yes | No | C.A. | No | No | Yes | C.A. | No | N.A. | No | No | 2 | Weak | |
| Yes | C.A. | Yes | N.A. | No | No | No | C.A. | Yes | N.A. | C.A. | 3 | Weak | |
| No | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | No | 4 | Moderate | |
| Yes | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | N.A. | No | Yes | 6 | Moderate | |
| Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | No | N.A. | N.A. | No | Yes | 4 | Moderate | |
| Yes | C.A. | Yes | N.A. | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | N.A. | C.A. | 4 | Moderate | |
| Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | 5 | Moderate | |
| Yes | C.A. | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | N.A. | No | 7 | Moderate | |
| Yes | C.A. | Yes | N.A. | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | N.A. | Yes | 6 | Moderate | |
| Yes | Yes | Yes | N.A. | No | No | No | No | N.A. | No | Yes | 4 | Moderate | |
| Yes | Yes | Yes | N.A. | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | Yes | 7 | Moderate | |
| Yes | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | N.A. | No | C.A. | 4 | Moderate | |
| Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 9 | Strong | |
| Yes | C.A | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | N.A. | N.A. | N.A. | Yes | 4 | Moderate | |
| Yes | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | N.A. | No | Yes | 6 | Moderate | |
| No | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | N.A. | No | Yes | 4 | Moderate | |
| No | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | N.A. | N.A. | No | No | 3 | Weak | |
| No | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | 4 | Moderate |
C.A. Can’t answer N.A. not applicable
Results of the included reviews.
| Author, Date [Ref] | Outcome(s) | Determinant(s) | Review aim | Overall qualitative results of the review | Overall quantitative results of the review | Overall limitations of the study | Overall Recommendations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (i) Changes in overall physical activity, (ii) changes in leisure-time PA (incl. Exercise but also hobbies and other active recreation | Retirement transition (SES influence on PA during the retirement transition). SES was determined by occupation in all four studies. Two of the studies also used household wealth as a SES indicator. | To examine changes in physical activity across the retirement transition, whether these changes vary by SES and what is known about predictors of these changes | Moderate evidence that retirement from manual or low-grade occupations was consistently associated with lower PA after retirement. Three studies reported a positive association between PA and retirement from sedentary or high grade occupation. | NA | Only 4 studies and only looking at SES influence on changes of PA due to retirement | SES moderates the association; lower SES is consistently associated with decreased PA levels and higher SES with increased PA levels. Findings should be interpreted with caution because robust assessment of SES can be challenging in retirement. For example, the use of last occupation to determine SES might lead to misclassification because of the downward mobility experienced by many employees in later working life. | |
| Total PA, total LTPA, (LTPA was the most common measure (n = 112)) active transport and OPA | Indicators of SEP included education, social class, (based on occupation), income (either individual or household level), household wealth (car, home ownership) or area-based indicators (area deprivation) | To systematically review the evidence pertaining to socioeconomic inequalities in different domains of PA by European region | Considerable differences in the direction of inequalities were seen based on different domains of PA. Most studies reported those with a high socioeconomic position were more physically active during leisure-time compared to those with lower socioeconomic positioning (68% +ve association for total LTPA) Occupational PA was more prevalent among lower SE groups (63% negative associations). Socioeconomic differences in total PA and active transport PA did not show a consistent pattern. | NA | English language only, methodological differences such as PA assessment, participant selection and the adjustment for confounders in some studies | LTPA and more specifically, vigorous LTPA is less prevalent while occupational PA is more prevalent among people with lower SEP. Inconsistent results in total PA indicate that total PA may not be a suitable summary measure when investigating inequalities in PA. | |
| Physical activity was defined as any bodily movement that results in energy expenditure. This definition allowed for the inclusion of both organised (e.g. sports) and non-organised (e.g. free play) physical activities | Payment of fees and / or equipment | To systematically examine the relationship of parental social support to physical activity related behaviours of youth. | Only four studies (6%) assessed the association of parental payment of fees and purchase of equipment to activity-related behaviours. Though limited in numbers, these studies indicate that parents purchase more equipment for boys than girls and payment of fees has been associated with higher levels of activity. High costs associated with involvement are rated as the number one reason for nonparticipation in school-community sports and non-sport activities. | NA | Only 4 studies examining the association of parental payment of fees and purchase of equipment | Variations in whether or not parental social support is related to youth activity levels is shown to be a function of the activity measure employed; Inconsistent measurement of physical activity needs to be addressed. | |
| Physical activity was defined as any bodily movement that results in energy expenditure. Therefore, any study that measured leisure-time PA, occupational activities, household activities, exercise and sport was included | Education, employment and income | To unite the literature regarding the physical activity behaviours of Native Americans | Education was not related to PA in 3 of the 5 studies. In the remaining two, it was shown that women with a college education were three times more likely to participate in PA. The three studies that investigated employment found no relationship to PA levels and one of the 2 studies that investigated income found mixed positive associations between PA and income. | NA | Appropriateness of the measurement tools for PA; not validated for a Native American Population | This study was focused on Native Americans _ interestingly the findings are inverse in relation to PA and correlations with income, education and employment when compared to white Americans and Europeans | |
| Overall PA | Socioeconomic status | To systematically review the published evidence regarding determinants of change in PA in children and adolescents | Results were mixed: | N.A. | Heterogenous studies in terms of study design, analysis methods, outcome measures and investigated exposures. | ||
| Total physical activity and MVPA | Socioeconomic status | To review the correlates of physical activity, sedentary behaviour and eating behaviour in children between 4 and 6 years old | No association between SES and PA were identified | NA | |||
| Overall PA levels and change in PA levels over time | Payments of fees | To examine parental influences on different types and intensities of PA in youth | For boys parental fee paying significantly related to PA and to PA changes. There was no relationship evident for girls | NA | Only one study investigated the variable (payment of fees) | ||
| Any measure of overall PA of various types (i.e. play, games, sports, work, transportation, PE or planned exercise) expressed in duration or frequency or a combination of both (METS or kcal) | Parental SES, Parental occupational status, father occupational status, mother occupational status, parental education, father's education, mother's education, hours parents work, home ownership | To systematically review the environmental factors that are associated with PA in youths | Parental SES was positively associated with youth PA in 8 studies, negatively associated in 1 and not related in 13. Parental occupational was examined in 6 studies and found not be related to youth PA levels. Parental education was not related in 21 out of 24 studies. No relationship with PA levels and home ownership (n = 2) was identified | NA | Heterogeneity of PA measures and weak study designs | Studies in which parental SES was defined as a composite of parent's education and income levels / occupational status were generally unrelated to children's PA. However, studies in which the individual component of SES were examined showed some positive association | |
| Overall PA, LTPA, VPA, MPA and MVPA, walking, habitual activity, household activity, change in PA | Social Class, Income, Education and Home ownership | To determine if there is strong evidence of a positive gradient increasing physical activity across the socioeconomic strata and how relationships are effected by socio-economic measurement | Consistent evidence of a higher prevalence or higher levels of LTPA or MVPA in those at the highest socioeconomic strata compared with those at the bottom. Evidence for positive gradients across the socioeconomic strata was less consistent. Education produced the most stable relationship, less susceptible to confounding effects of ethnicity / environment. | NA | The majority of studies were secondary analyses of existing health survey data, which could explain the generally large sample sizes and methodological weaknesses in physical activity and SEP measurement. | Diverse and often crude physical activity and socio-economic measurement made it difficult to distinguish and true effect with so many potential confounding influences. Further studies using contemporary methods of socio-economic and physical activity measurement are necessary to further explore this relationship and its confounders | |
| Physical activity was defined as any bodily movement that results in energy expenditure. This definition allows for the inclusion of both organised (e.g. sports) and non-organised (e.g. free play) physical activities | Family socioeconomic status | To unite the existing research on parental influences on children's PA behaviours in order to establish direction for future research and improve existing PA intervention programmes | There was no significant relationship identified in any of the studies in terms of PA levels and family SES. One study showed that girls aged 9–12 were more likely to stay active as they got older if they were from a higher SES. | NA | 80% of parents in two of the included studies had a minimum of a college education that may have influenced the study outcome. Also a major limitation is the lack of standard measurement of family SES. Confounders such as ethnicity and parental occupation were not controlled for | ||
| All types of overall PA domains were included | SES, parental education | To systematically review articles investigating the correlates of preschool children's physical activity. | SES was investigated in 3 studies and found to be unrelated to PA levels in all three (0) and parental education was investigated in one study and was also not related to PA (0) | NA | The majority of research conducted in this area has employed relatively small potentially non-representative samples (usually with <300 participants). | The level of variability in PA is relatively small in preschool children thereby compounding the effect of small sample sizes | |
| Total PA or leisure time PA (LTPA) | Family SES, parental education | To systematically review the factors relating to physical activity in Chinese children and adolescents | There was no significant relationship identified in any of the studies in terms of PA levels and family SES or parental education levels | NA | Weak study designs (cross-sectional) and poor validated PA measurement tools | Future research is required to enhance understanding of influences, such as SES especially in early childhood. | |
| Overall PA levels | Work hours and demands, income, higher education, Lack of Access (transportation difficulties, lack of resources, lack of affordability) | To investigate the determinants of PA levels among rural women in the United States | Work hours and demands were identified as a barrier to PA, creating a need for adaptation. Income: 2 studies noted a correlation between increased income and increased levels of PA. Other showed income as an influence on other determinants e.g. transportation problems and an inability to afford fitness fees. | NA | Self-reported only PA was used; exclusion of articles outside US and only one reviewer was involved | Rural women have been found to be less active and experience more barriers to PA than urban women. Interventions to promote PA in rural women should address each of these dimensions (personal, socio-economic and physical) for optimal effectiveness | |
| Exercise referral scheme (ERS) uptake or adherence | Deprived neighbourhoods | To quantify the levels of ERS uptake and adherence and to identify factors predictive of uptake and adherence; to also identify differences in uptake and adherence between those recruited into observational studies and RCTs | Participants residing in more deprived neighbourhoods were less likely to attend at least one session and those individuals living in a more rural location where less likely to uptake ERS. | NA | Difficulty with the definitions of uptake and adherence | ||
| Physical activity levels during school recess | Socioeconomic status | To examine correlates of children’s and adolescents’ physical activity during school recess periods | There was inconclusive evidence for associations between socio-economic status and physical activity. Some positive associations were found between overall facility provisions, unfixed equipment, and perceived encouragement and recess physical activity. Results also revealed that boys were more active than girls. | NA | Small sample sizes that utilised cross-sectional study designs. Limited number of studies that report effect sizes and the lack of consistency in the correlates | There is currently a dearth of literature concerning correlates of physical activity during recess periods, particularly in adolescents. Despite the paucity of associations | |
| Overall PA participation | Monetary/socio-economic issues | Aims to systematically examine and summarise factors impacting physical activity participation among African American adults | Monetary costs of joining a fitness club or purchasing exercise equipment were perceived as impediments, mostly among women | NA | The study does not aim to assess cross-cultural differences pertaining to perceptions of physical activity between various racial/ethnic groups, an area of investigation that clearly warrants further examination. Qualitative research has its limitations, such as inability to generalise findings to a reference population. | To effectively promote physical activity among African Americans, targeted interventions will need to address impediments at multiple levels: i.e. individual impediments.g. self-efficacy, lack of time and money), social barriers (e.g. lack of childcare and social support) and environmental determinants (e.g. crime in and lack of access to safe exercise facilities and parks). | |
| Break time and after-school PA. | Family affluence (SES) | To assess potential correlates of school break time and after-school PA | Positive associations were found for SES (family affluence) and school break time PA. No associations were found for SES and after school PA (females only study) | NA | The current review identified a small number of studies that varied widely in important methodological aspects, thereby limiting the generalisability conclusions that can be drawn. Due to the relatively high proportion of cross-sectional studies included in the review, it is not possible to identify those correlates of PA behaviour change that would provide the most powerful evidence for intervention design. The relatively narrow age range specified in the current review is a limitation. | This review exposed a lack of clarity in this area and underscores the importance of focusing attention on context- and setting-specific PA among young people. Associations between PA and a potential correlate have been shown to differ depending on how PA or the correlate was measured. Future studies should choose measurement tools with appropriate psychometric properties. | |
| Overall PA | Socioeconomic status | To summarise and update the literature on correlates of PA, insufficient PA, and sedentary behavior in young people | No association between socioeconomic status and overall PA was found. | NA | Publication bias may be present; possibility of missed studies as a result of the search strategy; the main outcome was overall PA without other classifications; mostly cross-sectional studies included; because of the variability, it was not possible to assess the overall strength of the associations | More prospective studies are needed and more research including children | |
| Neighbourhood walking, sedentary lifestyle, bicycling, active commuting, overall PA, LTPA, VPA, MPA and MVPA | Cost of PA, house hold income; accessibility of employment; neighbourhood income | To gain insight into which environmental factors have been identified as potential determinants of various types and intensity of physical activity among adult men and women. | Availability of physical activity equipment was convincingly associated with vigorous physical activity/ sports and connectivity of trails with active commuting. Other possible, but less consistent correlates of physical activity were availability, accessibility and convenience of recreational facilities. No evidence was found for differences between men and women. | NA | Most studies used cross-sectional designs and non-validated measures of environments and/or behaviour | The vast majority of environmental determinants included in this review resulted in null associations, implicating that there either is no association for these attributes or they were defined in a wrong way. Therefore, it is important to conduct future research with clear, possibly standardised definitions of environmental attributes and physical activity within the strongest study design possible |
Summary of the results of the included reviews: The importance of a determinant and its strength of evidence.
| Preschool children (Overall PA) | Children & Adolescents (Overall PA) | Children (Overall PA) | Adolecents (Overall PA) | Children & Adolescents Break Time | Children & Adolescents After School | Adults | Adults VPA | Adults MVPA | Adults | Adults >40 | Adults >65 (overall PA and LTPA) | Rural women | Native American | African American | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 00, Pr [ | 0, Pr [ | 0, Pr [ | 0, Pr [ | +, Lns [ | 0, Lns [ | +, Ce [ | +, Ce [ | +, Ls [ | |||||||
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| +, Ls [ | 0, Pr [ | 0, Lns [ | 0, Lns [ | +, Pr [ | +, Lns [ | 0, Ls [ | |||||||||
| 00Lns [ | 00, Lns [ | ||||||||||||||
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| 00, Pr [ | -, Lns [ | ||||||||||||||
| 0, Ls [ | +, Lns [ | +, Lns [ | +, Lns [ | +, Lns [ | +, Lns [ | -, Lns [ | -, Lns [ | ||||||||
| 00, Ls [ | +, Lns [ | +, Lns [ |