Cerin Ester, Leslie Eva, Owen Neville
Baylor College of Medicine, Children's Nutrition Research Center, 1100 Bates St, Houston 77030, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2009 Mar;68(6):1013-20. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.01.008. Epub 2009 Feb 3.
The identification of potential mechanisms of influence (mediators) of socio-economic status (SES) on walking for transport is important, because the likely opposing forces of influence may obscure pathways for intervention across different SES groups. This study examined individual, and perceived social and physical environmental mediators of the relations of individual- and area-level SES with walking for transport. Two mailed surveys, six months apart, collected data on transport-related walking and its hypothesized individual, social and environmental correlates. The sample consisted of 2194 English-speaking adults (aged 20-65) living in 154 Census Collection Districts (CCDs) of Adelaide, Australia. Individual-level SES was assessed using data on self-reported educational attainment, household income, and household size. Area-level SES was assessed using census data on median household income and household size for each selected CCD. Bootstrap generalized linear models examined associations between SES, potential mediators, and total weekly minutes and frequency of walking for transport. The product-of-coefficient test was used to assess mediating effects. Individual, social-environmental, and physical environmental factors significantly contributed to the explanation of the relations between SES and transport-related walking frequency. Educational attainment and area- and individual-level income played independent roles in explaining frequency of walking for transport, through opposing common and distinct pathways. While engagement in leisure-time physical activity was the most influential mediator of the association between educational attainment and frequency of walking for transport, the number of motorized vehicles and perceived levels of environmental aesthetics and greenery were the strongest mediators of the relations of frequency of transport-related walking with individual- and area-level income, respectively. Environmental interventions aimed at increasing residential density, reducing physical barriers to walking and traffic load, developing social-support networks, and creating greener and more aesthetically pleasing environments in more-disadvantaged areas may help to reduce SES inequalities in participation in physical activity, by facilitating walking for transport.
确定社会经济地位(SES)对出行步行的潜在影响机制(中介因素)很重要,因为可能存在的相反影响力量可能会掩盖不同SES群体间的干预途径。本研究考察了个体层面、感知到的社会和物理环境中介因素,这些因素涉及个体层面和区域层面的SES与出行步行之间的关系。相隔六个月进行了两次邮寄调查,收集了与交通相关步行及其假定的个体、社会和环境相关因素的数据。样本包括居住在澳大利亚阿德莱德154个人口普查收集区(CCD)的2194名讲英语的成年人(年龄在20 - 65岁之间)。个体层面的SES通过自我报告的教育程度、家庭收入和家庭规模数据进行评估。区域层面的SES通过每个选定CCD的家庭收入中位数和家庭规模的普查数据进行评估。自抽样广义线性模型检验了SES、潜在中介因素与每周出行步行总分钟数和频率之间的关联。系数乘积检验用于评估中介效应。个体、社会环境和物理环境因素对解释SES与交通相关步行频率之间的关系有显著贡献。教育程度以及区域和个体层面的收入通过相反的共同和不同途径,在解释出行步行频率方面发挥着独立作用。虽然休闲时间体育活动的参与是教育程度与出行步行频率之间关联的最有影响力的中介因素,但机动车数量以及感知到的环境美学和绿化水平分别是交通相关步行频率与个体和区域层面收入关系的最强中介因素。旨在提高居住密度、减少步行的物理障碍和交通负荷、发展社会支持网络以及在较贫困地区创造更绿色、更美观环境的环境干预措施,可能有助于通过促进出行步行来减少身体活动参与方面的SES不平等。