4.6 Article

Neighborhood Environments and Objectively Measured Physical Activity in 11 Countries

期刊

MEDICINE & SCIENCE IN SPORTS & EXERCISE
卷 46, 期 12, 页码 2253-2264

出版社

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000000367

关键词

ADULTS; BUILT ENVIRONMENT; CANCER PREVENTION; MULTISITE STUDY

资金

  1. National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health
  2. Hong Kong Research Grants Council [HKU740907H, 747807H]
  3. Hong Kong University University Research Committee Strategic Research Theme (Public Health)
  4. National Institutes of Health [R01 HL67350, R01 CA127296]
  5. Colciencias grant [519_2010]
  6. Fogarty
  7. CeiBA
  8. National Health and Medical Research Council [569940, 1003960]
  9. Victorian Government
  10. Municipality of Aarhus
  11. grant Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports [MSM 6198959221]
  12. Health Research Council of New Zealand [07/356]
  13. Coca-Cola Company
  14. Medical Research Council under the National Preventive Research Initiative
  15. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Foundation
  16. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
  17. Nike, Inc.

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Purpose: Environmental changes are potentially effective population-level physical activity (PA) promotion strategies. However, robust multisite evidence to guide international action for developing activity-supportive environments is lacking. We estimated pooled associations of perceived environmental attributes with objectively measured PA outcomes, between-site differences in such associations, and the extent to which perceived environmental attributes explain between-site differences in PA. Methods: This was a cross-sectional study conducted in 16 cities located in Belgium, Brazil, Colombia, Czech Republic, Denmark, China, Mexico, New Zealand, Spain, United Kingdom, and United States of America. Participants were 6968 adults residing in administrative units stratified by socioeconomic status and transport-related walkability. Predictors were 10 perceived neighborhood environmental attributes. Outcome measures were accelerometry-assessed weekly minutes of moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA) and meeting the PA guidelines for cancer/weight gain prevention (420 min.wk(-1) of MVPA). Results: Most perceived neighborhood attributes were positively associated with the PA outcomes in the pooled, site-adjusted, single-predictor models. Associations were generalizable across geographical locations. Aesthetics and land use mix-access were significant predictors of both PA outcomes in the fully adjusted models. Environmental attributes accounted for within-site variability in MVPA, corresponding to an SD of 3 min.d(-1) or 21 min.wk(-1). Large between-site differences in PA outcomes were observed; 15.9%-16.8% of these differences were explained by perceived environmental attributes. All neighborhood attributes were associated with between-site differences in the total effects of the perceived environment on PA outcomes. Conclusions: Residents' perceptions of neighborhood attributes that facilitate walking were positively associated with objectively measured MVPA and meeting the guidelines for cancer/weight gain prevention at the within- and between-site levels. Associations were similar across study sites, lending support for international recommendations for designing PA-friendly built environments.

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