| Literature DB >> 33239036 |
Chastin Sfm1,2, J Van Cauwenberg3, L Maenhout4, G Cardon4, E V Lambert5, D Van Dyck4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Physical inactivity is a global pandemic associated with a high burden of disease and premature mortality. There is also a trend in growing economic inequalities which impacts population health. There is no global analysis of the relationship between income inequality and population levels of physical inactivity.Entities:
Keywords: Economy; Gini index; Guidelines; Inactivity; Inequality; Physical activity; WHO activity guidelines
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33239036 PMCID: PMC7690175 DOI: 10.1186/s12966-020-01039-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 6.457
Summary statistics for insufficient physical activity levels, activity gender gap and income inequality by country income group, given as median and interquartile range
| Country Income group | Low | Middle | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whole population insufficient physical activity (%) | 15.5 (14.3 22.6) | 27.5 (18.7 36.3) | 31.1 (28.4 37.3) |
| Male population insufficient physical activity (%) | 12.7 (10.8 19.6) | 21.2 (17.37 28.8) | 27.4 (25.4 31.7) |
| Female population insufficient physical activity (%) | 18.7 (16.9 26.1) | 31.8 (23.6 40.4) | 33.95 (31.3 40.8) |
| Activity gender gap (%) | 6.30 (3.30 8.30) | 9.45 (6.33 15.5) | 7.25 (4.38 9.50) |
| S80/20 | 7.37 (6.50 8.95) | 7.44 (5.60 9.31) | 5.06 (4.29 5.74) |
| Health care expenditure (% of GDP) | 6 .00 (5.00 8.00) | 6.00 (4.25 7.75) | 9.00 (8.00 10.0) |
| Out of pocket (% health expenditure) | 42.0 (31.5 61.0) | 32.5 (23.6 40.4) | 16.0 (14.0 22.5) |
Fig. 1Relationship between insufficient physical activity and income inequality by World bank income group. Whole country population data are in black (o), male data are in blue (Δ) and female in red (+). Raw association are plotted as dashed line with the same colour coding
Fig. 2Relationship between gender activity gap and Income inequality per World Bank country income group. Blue lines show the trend with 95% confidence intervals shown as grey ribbons. The income inequality scale are kept identical between plots to facilitate comparision
Multiple regression unadjusted coefficients with 95% confidence intervals. Significant associations at p < 0.05 are highlighted in bold
| Country Income Group | High | Mid | Low |
|---|---|---|---|
| Raw association | |||
| Whole population | −0.73 (− 1.78 0.32) | ||
| Male | −0.45 (− 1.35 0.44) | ||
| Female | −0.99 (−2.24 0.26) | ||
| Activity gender gap | −0.55 (−1.06 0.02) | ||
| Models adjusted for health care expenditure | |||
| Whole population | −0.56 (−1.69 0.57) | ||
| Male | −0.34 (−1.31 0.63) | ||
| Female | −0.77 (−2.11 0.57) | ||
| Activity gender gap | −0.43 (− 0.16 1.02) | ||