| Literature DB >> 29615131 |
Mohammad Javad Koohsari1,2,3, Koichiro Oka4, Ai Shibata4,5, Yung Liao6, Tomoya Hanibuchi7, Neville Owen4,8, Takemi Sugiyama9,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inconsistent associations of neighbourhood walkability with adults' body weight have been reported. Most studies examining the relationships of walkability and adiposity are cross-sectional in design. We examined the longitudinal relationships of two walkability indices - conventional walkability and space syntax walkability, and their individual components, with weight change among adults over four years.Entities:
Keywords: Built environment; Obesity; Public health; Space syntax; Urban design
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29615131 PMCID: PMC5883344 DOI: 10.1186/s12966-018-0668-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 6.457
Sample characteristics at baseline (N = 910)
| Variable | Mean (SD) or N (%) |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 48.7 (10.3) |
| Gender | |
| Women | 556 (61.1%) |
| Education | |
| Tertiary or higher | 424 (46.6%) |
| Children in household | |
| Yes | 266 (29.2%) |
| Marital status | |
| Single | 326 (35.8%) |
| Couple | 567 (62.3%) |
| Other | 17 (1.9%) |
| Household income (AUD$ per annum) | |
| < $20,800 | 167 (18.4%) |
| $20,800–41,599 | 222 (24.4%) |
| $41,600–77,999 | 310 (34.1%) |
| ≥ $78,000 | 183 (20.1%) |
| Missing | 28 (3.1%) |
| Car ownership | |
| No car | 57 (6.3%) |
| One car | 350 (38.5%) |
| Two or more cars | 503 (55.3%) |
| Weight at baseline (kg) | 74.9 (15.9) |
| Weight change (kg) | 1.5 (5.6) |
Prospective relationships of neighbourhood walkability index and SSW with weight change (N = 910)
| Coefficient (95% CI) | |
|---|---|
| Neighbourhood walkability | 0.01 (−0.42, 0.44) |
| SSW | −0.19 (− 0.55, 0.16) |
All models accounted for clustering at the CCD level and adjusted for age, gender, educational attainment, work status, marital status, having children in the household, annual household income, car ownership, neighbourhood SES, and baseline weight. All exposure measures were standardized
Prospective relationships of walkability components with weight change (N = 910)
| Coefficient (95% CI) | |
|---|---|
| Net residential density | 0.26 (− 0.14, 0.67) |
| Intersection density | −0.13 (− 0.59, 0.32) |
| Land use mix | 0.12 (− 0.26, 0.49) |
| Net retail area ratio | 0.03 (−0.41, 0.46) |
| Gross population density | 0.11 (−0.28, 0.51) |
| Street integration | −0.31 (− 0.66, 0.05)† |
† p ≤ 0.10
All models accounted for clustering at the CCD level and adjusted for age, gender, educational attainment, work status, marital status, having children in the household, annual household income, car ownership, neighbourhood SES, and baseline weight. All exposure measures were standardized