Medical Research Council Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, Glasgow, UK.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2008 Aug 27;5:43. doi: 10.1186/1479-5868-5-43.
Environmental characteristics may be associated with patterns of physical activity in general or with particular types of physical activity such as active travel (walking or cycling for transport). However, most studies in this field have been conducted in North America and Australia, and hypotheses about putative correlates should be tested in a wider range of sociospatial contexts. We therefore examined the contribution of putative personal and environmental correlates of active travel and overall physical activity in deprived urban neighbourhoods in Glasgow, Scotland as part of the baseline for a longitudinal study of the effects of opening a new urban motorway (freeway).
We conducted a postal survey of a random sample of residents (n = 1322), collecting data on socioeconomic status, perceptions of the local environment, travel behaviour, physical activity and general health and wellbeing using a new 14-item neighbourhood rating scale, a travel diary, the short form of the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ) and the SF-8. We analysed the correlates of active travel and overall physical activity using multivariate logistic regression, first building models using personal (individual and household) explanatory variables and then adding environmental variables.
Active travel was associated with being younger, living in owner-occupied accommodation, not having to travel a long distance to work and not having access to a car, whereas overall physical activity was associated with living in social rented accommodation and not being overweight. After adjusting for personal characteristics, neither perceptions of the local environment nor the objective proximity of respondents' homes to motorway or major road infrastructure explained much of the variance in active travel or overall physical activity, although we did identify a significant positive association between active travel and perceived proximity to shops.
Apart from access to local amenities, environmental characteristics may have limited influence on active travel in deprived urban populations characterised by a low level of car ownership, in which people may have less capacity for making discretionary travel choices than the populations studied in most published research on the environmental correlates of physical activity.
环境特征可能与一般的身体活动模式有关,也可能与特定类型的身体活动有关,如积极出行(步行或骑自行车出行)。然而,该领域的大多数研究都是在北美和澳大利亚进行的,因此应该在更广泛的社会空间背景下检验关于假定相关因素的假设。因此,我们研究了在苏格兰格拉斯哥贫困城市社区中,积极出行和整体身体活动的假定个人和环境相关因素的作用,这是一项关于新城市高速公路(高速公路)开通对影响的纵向研究的基线的一部分。
我们对随机抽取的居民(n=1322)进行了邮寄调查,使用新的 14 项邻里评分量表、出行日记、国际体力活动问卷(IPAQ)简短版和 SF-8,收集了社会经济地位、对当地环境的看法、出行行为、身体活动以及一般健康和幸福感的数据。我们使用多变量逻辑回归分析了积极出行和整体身体活动的相关因素,首先使用个人(个人和家庭)解释变量构建模型,然后添加环境变量。
积极出行与年龄较小、居住在自有住房、工作不需要长途通勤以及没有汽车有关,而整体身体活动与居住在社会出租住房和没有超重有关。在调整个人特征后,当地环境的看法以及受访者家庭与高速公路或主要道路基础设施的客观接近程度都不能解释积极出行或整体身体活动的大部分差异,尽管我们确实发现积极出行与对商店接近程度之间存在显著的正相关关系。
除了接近当地便利设施外,环境特征对拥有汽车数量低的贫困城市人口的积极出行的影响可能有限,在这些人群中,与大多数关于身体活动环境相关因素的已发表研究中研究的人群相比,人们可能没有更多的能力做出自由裁量的出行选择。