Department of Internal Medicine, Center for Child and Adolescent Health Policy, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA.
Acad Pediatr. 2009 Sep-Oct;9(5):315-21. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2009.02.009. Epub 2009 May 27.
To assess differences in built environment and child weight, and associations between them in high- and low-income communities.
By means of cross-sectional clinical and demographic data for children aged 2 to 18 years from an integrated health system in Massachusetts, we linked subject (n = 6680) and spatial data from Geographic Information Systems. We selected towns with at least 100 subjects per town (n = 46 towns), and we divided towns into quartiles by household income. We compared highest and lowest quartile towns on environmental characteristics (density of fast food restaurants, distance to nearest fast food restaurant, distance to nearest age-appropriate school) and overweight and obesity prevalence. We used clustered logistic regression to assess for associations between environmental characteristics and weight and carried out similar analyses stratified by age (2 to <5, 5 to <12, 12 to 18 years).
Low-income towns had more sidewalks, less open space, a greater density of fast food restaurants, and higher rates of overweight/obesity. Among low-income-town children, after adjusting for age, gender, race, and town, density of fast food restaurants was positively associated with overweight and obesity, whereas distance to nearest age-appropriate school and fast food restaurant were inversely associated with obesity. Children from low-income towns appeared to have more consistent associations between weight status and the built environment.
Built environment varies by town income. Children living in low-income towns tend to have built environments that promote energy intake and decrease opportunities for energy expenditure.
评估高收入和低收入社区的建成环境和儿童体重的差异,并分析它们之间的关联。
通过对马萨诸塞州一个综合医疗系统中年龄在 2 至 18 岁的儿童的横断面临床和人口统计学数据,我们将研究对象(n=6680)与地理信息系统的空间数据相联系。我们选择了每个镇至少有 100 名受试者的镇(n=46 个镇),并按家庭收入将镇分为四分位。我们比较了环境特征(快餐店密度、离最近快餐店的距离、离最近适龄学校的距离)和超重/肥胖流行率最高和最低四分位的镇。我们使用聚类逻辑回归来评估环境特征与体重之间的关联,并按年龄(2 至<5 岁、5 至<12 岁、12 至 18 岁)进行了类似的分析。
低收入镇有更多的人行道、更少的开放空间、更高的快餐店密度和更高的超重/肥胖率。在低收入镇的儿童中,在调整年龄、性别、种族和镇后,快餐店密度与超重和肥胖呈正相关,而离最近适龄学校和快餐店的距离与肥胖呈负相关。来自低收入镇的儿童的体重状况与建成环境之间似乎存在更一致的关联。
建成环境因镇收入而异。居住在低收入镇的儿童的建成环境往往促进能量摄入,减少能量消耗的机会。