| Literature DB >> 30119657 |
Nancy Edwards1, Joshun Dulai2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Walkability is considered an important dimension of healthy communities. However, variable associations between measures of walkability and physical activity have been observed, particularly among older persons. Given the challenges older persons may have navigating stairs on walking routes, the presence of stairs may be an explanatory factor for these mixed associations. The purposes of this scoping review were to determine whether studies examining the relationship between walkability and physical activity included items that assessed stairs and what relationships were found.Entities:
Keywords: Built environment; Older persons; Physical activity; Stairs; Walkability
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30119657 PMCID: PMC6098658 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5945-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Study Retrieval Algorithm
Summary of systematic reviews on walkability and physical activity included
| Author (s) (Year) | Defined Walkability | Age Was a Criterion for Eligibility | Methodological Quality of Primary Studies Assessed | Outcome Variables | Findings of Interest | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | |||
| Barnett et al. (2017) [ | ✓ | ✓(65+) | ✓ | Total physical activity and total walking | Neighbourhood walkability was positively associated with older persons’ total physical activity and total walking. | |||
| Cerin et al. (2017) [ | ✓ | ✓(65+) | ✓ | Active travel (total walking for transport, within-neighbourhood walking for transport, cycling for transport, combined walking and cycling for transport, & all active travel outcomes combined) | Walkability was significantly positively associated with total walking and all active travel, positively associated with walking and cycling combined, but not associated with cycling for transport. | |||
| Grasser et al. (2013) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Walking and cycling for transport, overall active transportation, and weight-related measures | Walkability measures were consistently positively associated with walking in studies examined. Correlations between overall active transportation and weight-related measures were weak. | |||
| McCormack & Shiell (2011) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Physical activity | Walkability indices and land-use mix (a component of walkability) were consistently positively associated with physical activity, after controlling for neighbourhood self-selection. | |||
| Renalds et al. (2010) [ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Health (physical activity, obesity and overweight, social capital, and mental health) | More walkable neighbourhoods were associated with higher levels of physical activity among residents. | |||
| Van Holle (2012) [ | ✓ | ✓(18–65) | ✓ | Physical activity domains: total physical activity, leisure-time physical activity, total walking and/or cycling, recreational walking and/or cycling, active transportation in general, transportation walking, and transportation cycling | Overall walkability was positively associated with total physical activity, transportation walking, and transportation cycling across studies. It was not associated with recreational or leisure time physical activity. There weren’t enough studies to make any conclusions about the relationship between walkability with total walking/cycling or general active transportation | |||
| Zapata-Diomedi & Veerman (2016) [ | ✓ | ✓(18+) | ✓ | Physical activity | Strong positive associations between physical activity and walkability overall. Stronger associations between walkability and transport-related and total physical activity than between walkability and recreational physical activity. | |||
Measures of walkability: tools, indices and questionnaires and stair assessment
| Name/Type of walkability tool, index, or questionnaire ( | Assesses Geographic Terrain | Assesses Stairs | Number of Articles Using This Measure (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Audit of Physical Activity Resources for Seniors (APARS) | Yes | Yes | 1 (0.5%) |
| Geographic Information Systems (GIS) | Yes1 | No | 110 (53.7%) |
| International Physical Activity Questionnaire Environmental Module (IPAQ-E) | No | No | 5 (2.4%) |
| Neighborhood Brief Observation Tool | No | No | 1 (0.5%) |
| Neighborhood Environment Walkability Scale (NEWS; all versions) | Yes | No | 51 (24.9%) |
| Neighborhood Open Space (NOS) | No | No | 3 (1.5%) |
| Neighborhood Resident Survey | No | No | 1 (0.5%) |
| Neighborhood Walking Questionnaire for Chinese Seniors (NWQ-CS) | Yes | No | 4 (2.0%) |
| New Urbanism Index | No | No | 1 (0.5%) |
| Older Peoples Active Living (OPAL) questionnaire | Unknown | Unknown | 3 (1.5%) |
| Self-created items or indices on walkability | Yesa | Yesa | 45 (22.0%) |
| (Street Smart) Walk Score | No | No | 5 (2.4%) |
| Systematic Pedestrian and Cycling Environment Scan (SPACES) | Yes | No | 1 (0.5%) |
| University of Miami Built Environment Coding System (UMBECS) | No | No | 1 (0.5%) |
| Zhongshan Household Travel Survey (ZHTS) | Unknown | Unknown | 1 (0.5%) |
| Total | 6 | 1b | 205 (100%)c |
aRefers to a broader set of walkability measures and thus some collect information on geographic terrain while others do not
bAPARS is the only walkability tool that that includes questions on stairs. However, in four other articles there were questions about stairs as survey items in their studies about walkability
cSince some studies used more than one type of walkability measure, the numbers and percentages add up to more than 205 and 100% respectively
Summary of Articles That Assessed Stairs
| Articles That Included Questions on Stairs ( | Age of Participants | Geographic Location & Terrain | Walkability Measure Used | Differentiated Between Indoor & Outdoor Stairs | Question (s) on Stairs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| De Bourdeaudhuij et al. (2003) [ | 2003: 18–65a | Urban (no information on terrain) | Self-created items on walkability | N (both papers) | “Are the stairs at your work accessible? Safe? Pleasant?” (Y, N, NA) |
| Kerr et al. (2011) [ | 66+ | Urban; Assessed curved paths and path with moderate slope | Audit of Physical Activity Resources for Seniors (APARS) | Y | “Outside stairways (not from building)” (Y/N) |
| Koh et al. (2015) [ | 65+ | Urban; Assessed slopes in neighborhood | Self-created items on walkability | N (appears to focus on outdoor stairs only) | “There are few stairs/slopes in my neighbourhood” [“Strongly disagree” to “Strongly agree” (4-point scale)] |
| Tsai et al. (2013) [ | 75–81 | Urban; Terrain was one variable they looked at (defined as hilly terrain and poor street conditions) | Self-created items on walkability | Y | Survey questions not written out in article but they asked about environmental mobility barriers which includes presence of outdoor or indoor stairs in entrances (Y/N) |
aNote that older persons made up a small portion of this sample
bAge range was not specified in the article