Smith Ken R, Brown Barbara B, Yamada Ikuho, Kowaleski-Jones Lori, Zick Cathleen D, Fan Jessie X
Department of Family and Consumer Studies, 225 S 1400 E RM 228, University of Utah, Salt Lake City UT 84112-0080, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 2008 Sep;35(3):237-44. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2008.05.028.
Rising rates of overweight and obesity in the U.S. have increased interest in community designs that encourage healthy weight. This study relates neighborhood walkability-density, pedestrian-friendly design, and two novel measures of land-use diversity-to residents' excess weight.
Walkable-environment measures include two established predictors, higher density and pedestrian-friendly design (intersections within 0.25 mile of each address), and two new census-based, land-use diversity measures: the proportion of residents walking to work and the median age of housing. In 2006, weight, height, age, and address data from 453,927 Salt Lake County driver licenses for persons aged 25-64 years were linked to 2000 Census and GIS street-network information that was analyzed in 2007-2008. Linear regressions of BMI and logistic regressions of overweight and obesity include controls for individual-level age and neighborhood-level racial/ethnic composition, median age of residents, and median family income.
Increasing levels of walkability decrease the risks of excess weight. Approximately doubling the proportion of neighborhood residents walking to work decreases an individual's risk of obesity by almost 10%. Adding a decade to the average age of neighborhood housing decreases women's risk of obesity by about 8% and men's by 13%. Population density is unrelated to weight in four of six models, and inconsistently related to weight measures in two models. Pedestrian-friendly street networks are unrelated to BMI but related to lower risks of overweight and obesity in three of four models.
Walkability indicators, particularly the two land-use diversity measures, are important predictors of body weight. Driver licenses should be considered as a source of data for community studies of BMI, as they provide extensive coverage at low cost.
美国超重和肥胖率不断上升,这使得人们对鼓励健康体重的社区设计越来越感兴趣。本研究将邻里的步行便利性-密度、适合行人的设计以及两种新的土地利用多样性指标与居民的超重情况联系起来。
可步行环境指标包括两个既定的预测因素,即较高的密度和适合行人的设计(每个地址0.25英里范围内的交叉路口),以及两个基于人口普查的新的土地利用多样性指标:步行上班居民的比例和房屋的中位年龄。2006年,来自盐湖县453927份25至64岁人员驾驶执照的体重、身高、年龄和地址数据与2000年人口普查及地理信息系统街道网络信息相关联,并于2007 - 2008年进行了分析。身体质量指数(BMI)的线性回归以及超重和肥胖的逻辑回归包括个体层面年龄、邻里层面种族/族裔构成、居民中位年龄和家庭收入中位数的控制变量。
步行便利性水平的提高会降低超重风险。邻里中步行上班居民的比例增加约一倍,可使个人肥胖风险降低近10%。邻里房屋平均年龄增加十年,可使女性肥胖风险降低约8%,男性降低13%。在六个模型中的四个中,人口密度与体重无关,在另外两个模型中与体重指标的关系不一致。适合行人的街道网络与BMI无关,但在四个模型中的三个中与较低的超重和肥胖风险相关。
步行便利性指标,特别是两个土地利用多样性指标,是体重的重要预测因素。驾驶执照应被视为社区BMI研究的数据来源,因为它们能以低成本提供广泛的覆盖范围。