| Literature DB >> 35771873 |
Vikram Nichani1, Mohammad Javad Koohsari2, Koichiro Oka2, Tomoki Nakaya3, Ai Shibata4, Kaori Ishii2, Akitomo Yasunaga5, Jennifer E Vena6,7, Gavin R McCormack2,6.
Abstract
Evidence suggests that neighbourhood street connectivity is positively associated with physical activity, yet few studies have estimated its associations with sedentary behaviour. We estimated the associations between space syntax derived street integration, a novel measure of street connectivity, and sedentary behaviours among Canadian adults. Data were sourced from a population-based study-Alberta's Tomorrow Project (n = 14,758). Items from the International Physical Activity Questionnaire captured sedentary behaviour, including sitting and motor vehicle travel time and walking. Street integration was measured within a 1600m radius of participants' homes. Covariate-adjusted linear regression models estimated the associations between street integration and sedentary behaviour. Street integration was significantly positively associated with daily minutes of sitting on week (b 6.44; 95CI 3.60, 9.29) and weekend (b 4.39; 95CI 1.81, 6.96) days, and for week and weekend days combined (b 5.86; 95CI 3.30, 8.41) and negatively associated with daily minutes of motor vehicle travel (b -3.72; 95CI -3.86, -1.55). These associations remained significant after further adjustment for daily walking participation and duration. More research is needed to understand the pathways by which street integration positively and or negatively affects sedentary behaviour.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35771873 PMCID: PMC9246119 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0269829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.752
Descriptive characteristics for participants (n = 14,758).
| Variable | mean (SD) or % |
|---|---|
|
| 169.3 (86.4) |
|
| 80.8 |
|
| 40.3 (38.5) |
Abbreviation: SD = standard deviation.
*Street integration estimated in a 1600m buffer around each participant’s household address.
**Excludes participants reporting no walking participation.
Sedentary behaviours for participants of Alberta’s Tomorrow Project (n = 14,758).
| Types of behaviours | Mean (Standard Deviation) / median |
|---|---|
| Time spent sitting on weekdays (minutes/day) | 336.9 (181.5) / 300 |
| Time spent sitting on weekend days (minutes/day) | 291.6 (160.0) / 240 |
| Time spent sitting on weekdays and weekends (minutes/day) ((minutes(minutes/day) | 330.0 (160.7) / 300 |
| Time spent travelling in a motor vehicle (minutes/day) | 69.3 (68.2) / 60 |
Associations between street integration, sedentary behaviour, and walking for participants of Alberta’s Tomorrow Project.
| Time spent sitting on weekdays | Time spent sitting on weekends | Time spent sitting on weekdays | Time spent travelling in a motor vehicle | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| b (95% CI) | b (95% CI) | b (95% CI) | b (95% CI) | |
| Street integration | 6.44 (3.60, 9.29) | 4.39 (1.81, 6.96) | 5.86 (3.30, 8.41) | -2.71 (-3.86, -1.55) |
| Street integration | 6.67 (3.82, 9.52) | 4.94 (2.37, 7.51) | 6.18 (3.62, 8.73) | -2.66 (-3.81, -1.51) |
| Walking | -12.38 (-20.10, -4.47) | -29.40 (-36.41, -22.40) | -17.18 (-24.17, -10.18) | -2.37 (-5.50, 0.77) |
| Street integration | 6.67 (3.62 9.72) | 4.70 (1.95, 7.45) | 6.11 (3.38, 8.83) | -2.79 (-4.00, -1.57) |
| Walking (minutes/day) | -0.56 (-0.63, -0.48) | -0.42 (-0.48, -0.35) | -0.52 (-.0.58, -0.45) | 0.13 (0.10, 0.16) |
a = adjusted for age, sex, self-reported general health, current marital status, number of children in household, highest education level, current employment status, annual household income, and season of the receipt of the survey (n = 14,758).
b = adjusted for age, sex, self-reported general health, current marital status, number of children in household, highest education level, current employment status, annual household income, the season of the receipt of the survey, and walking duration (n = 14,758).
c = adjusted for age, sex, self-reported general health, current marital status, number of children in household, highest education level, current employment status, annual household income, the season of the receipt of the survey, and walking duration (among walkers only; n = 11,924).
Street integration values are standardized (z scores).
Neighbourhood defined as a 1600m buffered area around each participant’s household address.
* = p-value < .01.
** = p-value < .001.