Sarah M Mah 1 , Claudia Sanmartin 2 , Mylène Riva 1,3 , Kaberi Dasgupta 4,5 , Nancy A Ross 6 . Show Affiliations »
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate sex-specific and age-specific associations of active living environments (ALEs) with premature cardiometabolic mortality. DESIGN: Population-based retrospective cohort study. SETTING: Residential neighbourhoods (1000-metre circular buffers from the centroids of dissemination areas) across Canada for which the Canadian ALE Measure was derived, based on intersection density, points of interest and dwelling density. PARTICIPANTS: 249 420 survey respondents from an individual-level record linkage between the Canadian Community Health Survey (2000-2010) and the Canadian Mortality Database until 2011, comprised of older women (65-85 years), older men (65-81 years), middle-aged women (45-64 years) and middle-aged men (45-64 years). PRIMARY OUTCOME MEASURES: Premature cardiometabolic mortality and average daily energy expenditure attributable to walking. Multivariable proportional hazards regression models were adjusted for age, educational attainment, dissemination area-level median income, smoking status, obesity, the presence of chronic conditions, season of survey response and survey cycle. RESULTS: Survey respondents contributed a total of 1 451 913 person-years. Greater walking was observed in more favourable ALEs. Walking was associated with lower cardiometabolic death in all groups except for middle-aged men. Favourable ALEs conferred a 22% reduction in death from cardiometabolic causes (HR 0.78, 95% CI 0.63 to 0.97) for older women. CONCLUSIONS: On average, people walk more in favourable ALEs, regardless of sex and age. With the exception of middle-aged men, walking is associated with lower premature cardiometabolic death. Older women living in neighbourhoods that favour active living live longer. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate sex-specific and age-specific associations of active living environments (ALEs ) with premature cardiometabolic mortality . DESIGN: Population-based retrospective cohort study. SETTING: Residential neighbourhoods (1000-metre circular buffers from the centroids of dissemination areas) across Canada for which the Canadian ALE Measure was derived, based on intersection density, points of interest and dwelling density. PARTICIPANTS : 249 420 survey respondents from an individual-level record linkage between the Canadian Community Health Survey (2000-2010) and the Canadian Mortality Database until 2011, comprised of older women (65-85 years), older men (65-81 years), middle-aged women (45-64 years) and middle-aged men (45-64 years). PRIMARY OUTCOME MEASURES: Premature cardiometabolic mortality and average daily energy expenditure attributable to walking. Multivariable proportional hazards regression models were adjusted for age, educational attainment, dissemination area-level median income, smoking status, obesity , the presence of chronic conditions, season of survey response and survey cycle. RESULTS: Survey respondents contributed a total of 1 451 913 person-years. Greater walking was observed in more favourable ALEs . Walking was associated with lower cardiometabolic death in all groups except for middle-aged men . Favourable ALEs conferred a 22% reduction in death from cardiometabolic causes (HR 0.78, 95% CI 0.63 to 0.97) for older women . CONCLUSIONS: On average, people walk more in favourable ALEs , regardless of sex and age. With the exception of middle-aged men , walking is associated with lower premature cardiometabolic death . Older women living in neighbourhoods that favour active living live longer. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
Entities: Chemical
Disease
Gene
Species
Keywords:
epidemiology; public health; social medicine
Year: 2020
PMID: 33444170 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-035942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692