| Literature DB >> 30857372 |
Casper J P Zhang1, Anthony Barnett2, Janice M Johnston3, Poh-Chin Lai4, Ruby S Y Lee5, Cindy H P Sit6, Ester Cerin7,8.
Abstract
With an ageing world population, preservation of older adults' health and quality of life (QoL) is paramount. Due to lower levels of physical functionality, older adults are particularly susceptible to local environment influences, especially those living alone and lacking family support. Using generalised additive mixed models, we examined associations and confounder-adjusted associations between objectively-measured neighbourhood attributes and QoL domains in 909 Hong Kong Chinese elderly community dwellers. Most examined neighbourhood attributes were not associated with QoL in the whole sample. Neighbourhood residential and entertainment density was curvilinearly and/or linearly related to specific QoL domains. Number of parks was negatively associated with social QoL and having well-treed parks with higher levels of social QoL. Older adults living alone in neighbourhoods with poor access to destinations and few activities in parks showed lower environmental and/or social QoL than their counterparts. Neighbourhood built environment characteristics do not seem to impact Hong Kong older adults' physical and psychological QoL. Medium-to-high density, well-ordered neighbourhoods with optimal mixes of well-treed public open spaces and services meeting their daily needs may significantly contribute to social and environmental QoL in this population and appear particularly important to those living alone.Entities:
Keywords: Hong Kong; environmental audits; geographic information systems; living arrangements; mega-city; mental health; social support; walkability
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30857372 PMCID: PMC6427272 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16050876
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Sample characteristics (N = 909).
| Variables [Theoretical Range] | Statistics (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Socio-demographic and health-related characteristics | |||
| Sex, females | 66.3 | ||
| Educational attainment | |||
| No formal education | 20.8 | ||
| Primary school | 35.5 | ||
| Secondary school | 30.5 | ||
| Post-secondary school | 13.2 | ||
| Marital status | |||
| Married or cohabiting | 59.5 | ||
| Widowed | 32.7 | ||
| Other | 7.8 | ||
| Housing | |||
| Public and aided | 43.1 | ||
| Private (purchased) | 51.3 | ||
| Renting | 5.6 | ||
| Living alone | 23.1 | ||
| Household with car | 28.5 | ||
| Type of recruitment centre | |||
| Elderly health centres | 82.6 | ||
| Elderly community centres | 28.4 | ||
| Neighbourhood type | |||
| Low walkable, low SES | 22.0 | ||
| Low walkable, high SES | 24.8 | ||
| High walkable, low SES | 28.3 | ||
| High walkable, high SES | 25.0 | ||
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| Age (years) | 76.5 (6.0) | ||
| Number of diagnosed health problems [0–10] | 3.2 (2.0) | ||
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| Domain 1: Physical health (score) [4–20] | 16.1 (2.4) | ||
| Domain 2: Psychological health (score) [4–20] | 16.5 (2.1) | ||
| Domain 3: Social relationships (score) [4–20] | 15.1 (2.1) | ||
| Domain 4: Environment (score) [4–20] | 17.0 (2.0) | ||
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| Buffer | ||
| Based on extant GIS data aggregated by street-network residential buffers | |||
| Gross residential density (1000 households/km2) | 400 m | 15.8 (11.2) | 12.2 (13.8) |
| 800 m | 14.3 (8.4) | 12.9 (11.4) | |
| Street intersection density (intersections/km2) | 400 m | 119.9 (58.0) | |
| 800 m | 91.5 (40.0) | ||
| Civic and institutional density (destinations/km2) | 400 m | 88.2 (53.8) | |
| 800 m | 69.7 (36.5) | ||
| Entertainment density (destinations/km2) | 400 m | 11.8 (16.9) | 7.3 (16.1) |
| 800 m | 6.9 (5.2) | 6.2 (6.2) | |
| Recreation density (destinations/km2) | 400 m | 21.2 (23.2) | 17.5 (30.5) |
| 800 m | 22.5 (15.2) | 20.1 (13.6) | |
| Park area (hectares) | 400 m | 1.6 (9.4) | 0.2 (0.9) |
| 800 m | 9.5 (59.1) | 2.0 (5.3) | |
| Based on environmental audit data aggregated by crow-fly residential buffers | |||
| Connectivity (score) (0–100) | 400 m | 40.6 (7.4) | |
| Prevalence of non-food retail and services (number) | 400 m | 15.9 (16.5) | 11.0 (19.0) |
| Prevalence of food-related shops (number) | 400 m | 10.2 (8.6) | 11.0 (19.0) |
| Prevalence of eating outlets (number) | 400 m | 13.6 (13.1) | 9.0 (18.0) |
| Prevalence of destinations for socialising (number) | 400 m | 6.5 (6.2) | 5.0 (7.0) |
| Prevalence of health clinics/services (number) | 400 m | 3.9 (4.2) | 3.0 (4.0) |
| Prevalence of public transport stops (number) | 400 m | 8.1 (4.7) | 7.0 (5.0) |
| Number of parks | 400 m | 2.7 (2.4) | 2.0 (2.0) |
| Activity types in park (score) | 400 m | 1.8 (1.7) | 2.0 (3.0) |
| Amenities in park (score) [0–7] | 400 m | 2.9 (1.4) | |
| Trees in park (score) [0–5] | 400 m | 2.1 (1.2) | |
| Paths in park (score) [0–6] | 400 m | 1.7 (1.3) | 2.0 (1.0) |
| Park aesthetics (score) [0–3] | 400 m | 2.4 (1.0) | |
| Park visibility (score) [2–6] | 400 m | 2.1 (1.0) | |
| Pedestrian infrastructure (score) [0–100] | 400 m | 62.7 (9.4) | |
| Sitting facilities (score) [0–100] | 400 m | 20.5 (20.1) | 17.0 (31.0) |
| Crowdedness (score) [0–100] | 400 m | 9.8 (8.8) | 7.7 (12.5) |
| Presence of people (score) [0–100] | 400 m | 64.5 (21.6) | |
| Traffic safety (score) [0–100] | 400 m | 69.9 (15.0) | |
| Greenery/natural sights (score) [0–100] | 400 m | 36.9 (16.7) | 45.5 (25.6) |
| Signs of crime/disorder (score) [0–100] | 400 m | 0.3 (0.9) | 0.0 (0.0) |
| Stray dogs/animals (score) [0–100] | 400 m | 5.9 (9.9) | 0.0 (9.0) |
| Litter/decay (score) [0–100] | 400 m | 22.9 (4.1) | |
| Pollution (score) [0–100] | 400 m | 42.3 (33.2) | 40.0 (61.2) |
| Number of street segments audited | 400 m | 21.4 (17.5) | 16.0 (13.0) |
SES = socio-economic status; SD = standard deviation; IQR = interquartile range; GIS geographic information systems; a computed for environmental variables with skewness > |1.0|.
Associations of single neighbourhood physical environmental attributes with quality of life (QoL) domains.
| Environmental Attributes (Unit) | Physical QoL | Psychological QoL | Social QoL | Environmental QoL | ||||
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| Gross residential density a (1000 households/km2) | −0.007 (−0.028, 0.013) | 0.485 | 0.011 (−0.006, 0.028) | 0.217 | −0.001 (−0.018, 0.016) | 0.914 | −0.696 (−1.419, 0.027) | 0.059 |
| - Curvilinear † | - | - | - | - | - | - | 0.029 | |
| Street intersection density a | −0.138 (−0.576, 0.300) | 0.537 | −0.325 (−0.685, 0.034) | 0.076 | −0.396 (−0.744, −0.047) * | 0.026 | −0.731 (−1.083, −0.379) *** | <0.001 |
| Connectivity b (score) | −0.001 (−0.027, 0.025) | 0.945 | −0.001 (−0.022, 0.021) | 0.962 | 0.005 (−0.016, 0.026) | 0.646 | 0.003 (−0.018, 0.024) | 0.781 |
| Civic and institutional density a | 0.001(−0.004, 0.006) | 0.663 | 0.000 (−0.003, 0.004) | 0.818 | −0.002 (−0.006, 0.002) | 0.258 | −0.003 (−0.006, 0.001) | 0.206 |
| Prevalence of non-food retail/services b (number) | −0.004 (−0.016, 0.009) | 0.572 | −0.008 (−0.018, 0.002) | 0.130 | −0.008 (−0.018, 0.003) | 0.143 | −0.005 (−0.015, 0.005) | 0.332 |
| Entertainment density a (destinations/km2) | −0.015 (−0.047, 0.017) | 0.369 | 0.512 (−0.277, 1.301) | 0.203 | −0.042 (−0.068, -0.016) ** | 0.002 | 0.528 (−0.248, 1.30) | 0.182 |
| - Curvilinear † | - | - | 0.009 | - | - | 0.004 | ||
| Recreation density a (destination/km2) | −0.008 (−0.019, 0.003) | 0.152 | −0.002 (−0.011, 0.007) | 0.679 | −0.001 (−0.010, 0.008) | 0.861 | 0.000 (−0.009, 0.009) | 0.988 |
| Prevalence of food-related shops b (number) | −0.015 (−0.040, 0.011) | 0.257 | −0.013 (−0.033, 0.007) | 0.198 | −0.016 (−0.036, 0.003) | 0.100 | 0.001 (−0.020, 0.022) | 0.929 |
| Prevalence of eating outlets b (number) | −0.000 (−0.019, 0.018) | 0.971 | −0.004 (−0.019, 0.011) | 0.626 | −0.002 (−0.017, 0.013) | 0.774 | 0.001 (−0.014, 0.016) | 0.928 |
| Prevalence of destinations for socialising b (number) | −0.012 (−0.045, 0.022) | 0.494 | -0.010 (−0.037, 0.018) | 0.497 | −0.016 (−0.042, 0.011) | 0.243 | −0.005 (−0.032, 0.023) | 0.737 |
| Prevalence of health clinics/services b (number) | −0.006 (−0.052, 0.039) | 0.788 | −0.018 (−0.056, 0.019) | 0.335 | −0.029 (−0.066, 0.007) | 0.111 | −0.000 (−0.037, 0.037) | 0.996 |
| Prevalence of public transport stops b (number) | −0.024 (−0.074, 0.026) | 0.355 | −0.002 (−0.043, 0.039) | 0.927 | −0.026 (−0.065, 0.013) | 0.194 | 0.003 (−0.037, 0.044) | 0.875 |
| Parks b (number) | −0.031 (−0.100, 0.038) | 0.383 | −0.045 (−0.101, 0.012) | 0.123 | −0.080 (−0.135, −0.025) ** | 0.005 | −0.026 (−0.085, 0.034) | 0.398 |
| Park area a (hectares) | −0.000 (−0.003, 0.002) | 0.852 | 0.000 (−0.002, 0.002) | 0.998 | −0.002 (−0.004, −0.000) | 0.112 | 0.000 (−0.002, 0.003) | 0.776 |
| Activity types in park b (number) | −0.031 (−0.127, 0.066) | 0.537 | −0.018 (−0.098, 0.062) | 0.657 | −0.096 (−0.175, −0.018) * | 0.016 | −0.044 (−0.127, 0.039) | 0.296 |
| Amenities in park b (score) | −0.049 (−0.175, 0.077) | 0.448 | 0.006 (−0.100, 0.112) | 0.911 | 0.043 (−0.060, 0.147) | 0.414 | −0.006 (−0.114, 0.103) | 0.918 |
| Trees in park b (score) | 0.074 (−0.085, 0.233) | 0.359 | 0.053 (−0.080, 0.186) | 0.439 | 0.132 (0.003, 0.261) * | 0.046 | −0.018 (−0.154, 0.118) | 0.799 |
| Paths in park b (score) | 0.072 (−0.083, 0.226) | 0.362 | 0.062 (−0.067, 0.192) | 0.347 | 0.046 (−0.080, 0.173) | 0.470 | 0.006 (−0.126, 0.137) | 0.934 |
| Park aesthetics b (score) | −0.031 (−0.210, 0.148) | 0.734 | −0.003 (−0.154, 0.147) | 0.964 | 0.087 (−0.060, 0.234) | 0.243 | 0.052 (−0.102, 0.205) | 0.509 |
| Park visibility b (score) | −0.022 (−0.217, 0.173) | 0.823 | −0.016 (−0.178, 0.145) | 0.843 | 0.131 (−0.026, 0.288) | 0.102 | 0.022 (−0.145, 0.190) | 0.792 |
| Pedestrian infrastructure b (score) | 0.008 (−0.013, 0.028) | 0.462 | 0.001 (−0.015, 0.016) | 0.938 | 0.004 (−0.012, 0.019) | 0.647 | 0.010 (−0.006, 0.026) | 0.220 |
| Sitting facilities b (score) | −0.004 (−0.015, 0.006) | 0.418 | −0.003 (−0.011, 0.005) | 0.397 | 0.001 (−0.007, 0.009) | 0.770 | −0.002 (−0.010, 0.006) | 0.614 |
| Crowdedness b (score) | −0.016 (−0.036, 0.005) | 0.131 | −0.010 (−0.027, 0.006) | 0.218 | −0.010 (−0.026, 0.006) | 0.228 | −0.005 (−0.021, 0.012) | 0.567 |
| Presence of people b (score) | −0.005 (−0.014, 0.004) | 0.248 | 0.000 (−0.007, 0.008) | 0.927 | −0.003 (−0.011, 0.004) | 0.394 | 0.000 (−0.007, 0.008) | 0.915 |
| Traffic safety b (score) | 0.000 (−0.012, 0.013) | 0.968 | 0.002 (−0.008, 0.013) | 0.655 | −0.002 (−0.013, 0.008) | 0.628 | 0.004 (−0.007, 0.014) | 0.484 |
| Greenery/natural sights b (score) | −0.005 (−0.023, 0.013) | 0.565 | −0.007 (−0.022, 0.008) | 0.377 | −0.001 (−0.015, 0.014) | 0.909 | 0.004 (−0.011, 0.019) | 0.079 |
| Signs of crime/disorder b (score) | −0.023 (−0.221, 0.176) | 0.823 | −0.084 (−0.246, 0.077) | 0.306 | −0.080 (−0.238, 0.078) | 0.322 | −0.020 (−0.183, 0.143) | 0.808 |
| Stray dogs/animals b (score) | −0.009 (−0.028, 0.009) | 0.320 | −0.008 (−0.023, 0.007) | 0.291 | −0.000 (−0.015, 0.014) | 0.992 | −0.002 (−0.017, 0.013) | 0.794 |
| Litter/decay b (score) | −0.011 (−0.056, 0.034) | 0.632 | −0.035 (−0.070, 0.000) | 0.053 | −0.031 (−0.065, 0.004) | 0.080 | −0.035 (−0.071, 0.001) | 0.059 |
| Pollution b (score) | −0.000 (−0.006, 0.005) | 0.902 | −0.002(−0.006, 0.003) | 0.459 | −0.003 (−0.008, 0.001) | 0.112 | −0.003 (−0.007, 0.002) | 0.234 |
b = regression coefficient; CI = confidence interval; p = p-value; - = not applicable. a based on extant geographic information systems data—measure computed using 800 m street-network residential buffers; b based on data from environmental audits—measure computed using 400 m crow-fly residential buffers; † curvilinear associations depicted in Figure S1 (Additional file 1). All estimates adjusted for age, sex, educational attainment, household with car, marital status, housing type, living arrangement, area-level socio-economic status, type of recruitment centre, and number of current diagnosed health problems. “0.000” occurs due to rounding and does not equal to zero. * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001.
Associations between living arrangements (reference group: living with others) and quality of life (QoL) domains at region-of-significance threshold values of neighbourhood physical environmental attributes (moderators).
| Environmental Attribute | QoL Domain | Region-of-Significance Value of Environmental Moderator [% SRSV] | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Civic and institutional density a | Environmental | ≤44.0 locations/km2 [23%] | −0.405 (−0.809, −0.000) * |
| Prevalence of non-food retail/services b | Environmental | ≤1.3 destinations/bf [14%] | −0.446 (−0.892, −0.000) * |
| Prevalence of food-related shops b | Environmental | ≤4.0 shops/bf [35%] | −0.441 (−0.821, −0.002) * |
| Prevalence of eating outlets b | Environmental | ≤1.4 outlets/bf [14%] | −0.443 (−0.884, −0.001) * |
| Prevalence of destinations for socialising b | Environmental | ≤0.8 destinations/bf [9%] | −0.446 (−0.892, 0.000) * |
| Prevalence of health clinics/services b | Environmental | ≤1.6 destinations/bf [35%] | −0.388 (−0.773, −0.004) * |
| ≥11.6 destinations/bf [8%] | 0.693 (0.004, 1.383) * | ||
| Number of parks b | Social | ≤0.9 parks/bf [13%] | −0.429 (−0.850, −0.008) * |
| ≥11.7 parks/bf [2%] | 1.176 (0.002, 2.351) * | ||
| Environmental | ≤1.3 parks/bf [25%] | −0.390 (−0.773, −0.006) * | |
| ≥10.2 parks/bf [2%] | 0.962 (0.000, 1.923) * | ||
| Park area a | Physical | ≥58.8 hectares [2%] | −0.913 (−1.825, −0.000) * |
| Activity types in park b | Psychological † | Minimum: 0 types [69%] | −0.392 (−0.880, 0.097) # |
| Maximum: 9 types [2%] | 1.289 (−0.101, 2.678) ‡ | ||
| Social | ≤0.8 types/bf [31%] | −0.412 (−0.810, −0.013) * | |
| ≥5.6 types/bf [3%] | 0.785 (0.001, 1.568) * | ||
| Environmental | ≤0.8 types/bf [31%] | −0.388 (−0.771, −0.006) * | |
| ≥7.3 types/bf [2%] | 1.026 (0.005, 2.046) * | ||
| Trees in park b | Environmental | ≤1.3 points [18%] | −0.419 (−0.822, −0.016) * |
| Paths in park b | Environmental | ≤0.7 points [14%] | −0.427 (−0.845, −0.008) * |
| Park aesthetics b | Environmental | ≤1.9 points [13%] | −0.427 (−0.834, -0.019) * |
| Greenery/natural sights b | Social | ≥51.8 points [3%] | −0.454 (−0.908, −0.000) * |
| Signs of crime/disorder b | Psychological | ≥2.0 points [7%] | 0.752 (0.013, 1.492) * |
Notes. b = regression coefficient; CI = confidence interval; % SRS = % of sample falling within the region of significance values. a based on extant geographic information systems data—measure computed using 800 m street-network residential buffers; b based on data from environmental audits—measure computed using 400 m crow-fly residential buffer. bf = buffer. † Given no region-of-significance found, estimates at minimum and maximum values of moderator are shown. All estimates adjusted for age, gender, educational attainment, household with car, marital status, housing type, area-level socio-economic status, type of recruitment centre, and number of current diagnosed health problems. “0.000” occurs due to rounding and does not equal to zero. Only significant (p < 0.05) interaction terms between living arrangements and specific neighbourhood environmental attributes are shown. * p = 0.050; # p = 0.116; ‡ p = 0.069.
Associations of multiple neighbourhood physical environmental attributes with quality of life (QoL) domains.
| Variables † | Physical QoL | Psychological QoL | Social QoL | Environmental QoL | ||||
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| ENVIRONMENTAL MAIN EFFECTS | ||||||||
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| Gross residential density a | - | - | - | - | - | - | 0.018 | |
| Street intersection density a | - | - | - | - | - | - | −0.640 (−1.077, −0.204) ** | 0.004 |
| Entertainment density a (destinations/km2) | - | - | - | - | −0.036 (−0.062, −0.009) ** | 0.009 | - | - |
| Entertainment density a (destinations/km2)—curvilinear | - | - | 0.014 | - | - | 0.039 | ||
| Number of parks b | - | - | - | - | −0.097 (−0.186, −0.008) * | 0.032 | - | - |
| Trees in park b (score) | - | - | - | - | 0.160 (0.030, 0.289) * | 0.016 | - | - |
| Litter/decay b (score) | - | - | - | - | - | - | −0.035 (−0.068, −0.002) * | 0.038 |
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| Composite destination index ‡ | - | - | - | - | - | - | −0.016 (−0.056, 0.023) | 0.409 |
| Park area a (hectares) | 0.000 (−0.002, 0.003) | 0.813 | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Activity types in park b (number) | - | - | - | - | −0.082 (−0.205, 0.040) | 0.188 | - | - |
| Signs of crime/disorder b (score) | - | - | −0.187 (−0.371, −0.004) * | 0.045 | - | - | - | - |
| LIVING ARRANGEMENTS BY ENVIRONMENT INTERACTION EFFECTS | ||||||||
| Composite destination index ‡ | ||||||||
| 0.01 level: ≤−6.8 z-scores [4%] | - | - | - | - | - | - | −0.679 (−1.193, −0.164) ** | - |
| 0.05 level: ≤−3.3 z-scores [33%] | - | - | - | - | - | - | −0.393 (−0.782, −0.004) * | - |
| 0.05 level: ≥9.4 z-scores [6%] | - | - | - | - | - | - | 0.644 (0.003, 1.285) * | - |
| Park area a | ||||||||
| 0.05 level: ≥58.8 hectares [2%] | −0.913 (−1.825, −0.000) * | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Activity types in park b | ||||||||
| 0.05 level: ≤0.8 types [31%] | - | - | - | - | −0.409 (−0.805, −0.014) * | - | - | - |
| 0.05 level: ≥6.2 types [2%] | - | - | - | - | 0.883 (0.003, 1.762) * | - | - | - |
| Signs of crime/disorder b | ||||||||
| 0.05 level: ≥2.2 points [5%] | - | - | 0.815 (0.010, 1.620) * | - | - | - | - |
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Notes. b = regression coefficient; CI = confidence interval; p = p-value; .05 or .01 level = significance levels; - = not applicable; % SRS = % of sample falling within the region of significance values. a based on extant geographic information systems data—measure computed using 800 m street-network residential buffers; b based on data from environmental audits—measure computed using 400 m crow-fly residential buffer. † associations were linear unless specified, and curvilinear associations are depicted in Figure 1. ‡ the sum of z-scores of single destination-related variables that interacted with living arrangement in the single-environmental-variable models, including civic and institutional density—800 m street-network buffer, prevalence of non-food retail/services, prevalence of food-related shops, prevalence of eating outlets, prevalence of destinations for socialising, and prevalence of health clinics/services. All estimates adjusted for age, gender, educational attainment, household with car, marital status, housing type, area-level socio-economic status, type of recruitment centre, number of current diagnosed health problems, and other environmental attributes that uniquely contributed to the explanation of the outcome variables through main or moderating effects. “0.000” occurs due to rounding and does not equal to zero. * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01.
Figure 1Independent curvilinear associations of neighbourhood physical attributes with quality of life (QoL). [Full lines represent point estimates of modelled scores of specific QoL dimensions, while the dotted lines represent their 95% confidence intervals.].