Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, 3333 California Street, Suite 335, Box 0856, San Francisco, CA 94143-0856 USA.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2010 Jun 1;7:52. doi: 10.1186/1479-5868-7-52.
Neighborhood environments affect children's health outcomes. Observational methods used to assess neighborhoods can be categorized as indirect, intermediate, or direct. Direct methods, involving in-person audits of the neighborhoods conducted by trained observers, are recognized as an accurate representation of current neighborhood conditions. The authors investigated the associations of various neighborhood characteristics with young girls' diet and physical activity.
This study is based on a subset of participants in the Cohort Study of Young Girls' Nutrition, Environment and Transitions (CYGNET). In-person street audits were conducted within 215 girls' residential neighborhoods using a modified St. Louis Audit Tool. From the street audit data, exploratory factor analysis revealed five neighborhood scales: "mixed residential and commercial," "food and retail," "recreation," "walkability," and "physical disorder." A Neighborhood Deprivation Index was also derived from census data. The authors investigated if the five neighborhood scales and the Neighborhood Deprivation Index were associated with quartiles of total energy intake and expenditure (metabolic equivalent (MET) hours/week) at baseline, and whether any of these associations were modified by race/ethnicity.
After adjustment for demographic characteristics, there was an inverse association between prevalence of "food and retail" destinations and total energy intake (for a one quartile increase, OR = 0.84, 95% CI 0.74, 0.96). Positive associations were also observed between the "recreation" and "walkability" scales with physical activity among Hispanic/Latina girls (for a one quartile increase in MET, OR = 1.94, 95% CI 1.31, 2.88 for recreation; OR = 1.71, 95% CI 1.11, 2.63 for walkability). Among African-American girls, there was an inverse association between "physical disorder" and physical activity (OR = 0.31, 95% CI 0.12, 0.80).
These results suggest that neighborhood food and retail availability may be inversely associated with young girls' energy intakes in contrast to other studies' findings that focused on adults. There is considerable variation in neighborhoods' influences on young girls' physical activity behaviors, particularly for young girls of different racial/ethnic backgrounds.
邻里环境会影响儿童的健康结果。评估邻里环境的观察方法可分为间接、中间和直接。直接方法涉及由经过培训的观察者对邻里进行实地审计,被认为是当前邻里条件的准确代表。作者研究了各种邻里特征与年轻女孩饮食和身体活动的关联。
本研究基于年轻女孩营养、环境和过渡研究(CYGNET)参与者的一个子集。使用改良的圣路易斯审计工具,在 215 名女孩居住的社区内进行了实地街道审计。从街道审计数据中,通过探索性因素分析揭示了五个邻里规模:“混合住宅和商业”、“食品和零售”、“娱乐”、“可步行性”和“身体无序”。还从人口普查数据中得出了邻里贫困指数。作者研究了这五个邻里规模和邻里贫困指数是否与基线时总能量摄入和支出(代谢当量(MET)小时/周)的四分位值相关,以及这些关联是否因种族/民族而异。
在调整人口特征后,“食品和零售”目的地的患病率与总能量摄入呈负相关(每增加一个四分位,OR=0.84,95%CI 0.74,0.96)。在西班牙裔/拉丁裔女孩中,“娱乐”和“可步行性”量表与身体活动之间也存在正相关(“娱乐”每增加一个四分位,OR=1.94,95%CI 1.31,2.88;“可步行性”每增加一个四分位,OR=1.71,95%CI 1.11,2.63)。在非裔美国女孩中,“身体无序”与身体活动呈负相关(OR=0.31,95%CI 0.12,0.80)。
这些结果表明,与其他关注成年人的研究结果相反,邻里食品和零售供应可能与年轻女孩的能量摄入呈负相关。邻里对年轻女孩身体活动行为的影响存在很大差异,尤其是对不同种族/民族背景的年轻女孩。