Christian Hayley, Wood Lisa, Nathan Andrea, Kawachi Ichiro, Houghton Stephen, Martin Karen, McCune Sandra
School of Population Health, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA, 6009, Australia.
Telethon Kids Institute, 100 Roberts Road, Subiaco, WA, 6008, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2016 Sep 22;16(1):1010. doi: 10.1186/s12889-016-3659-8.
We examined the relationship between dog walking and physical activity within and between four US cities and Australia and investigated if dog walking is associated with higher perceived safety in US and Australian cities.
Dog owners (n = 1113) in the Pet Connections Study completed a cross-sectional survey. Data were collected across four study sites; three in the US (San Diego, Nashville, Portland) and a fourth in Australia (Perth). Physical activity, local walking, dog walking, and individual and community perceptions of safety were analysed for dog walkers and non-dog walkers for each study site. Between-city comparisons were examined for dog walkers.
Across all study sites, dog walkers walked with their dog 5-6 times/week for a total of 93-109 min/week and achieved ≥30mins of physical activity on more days/week and walked in their neighbourhood more often/week, compared with non-dog walkers (all p ≤ 0.01). Compared with Perth, significantly fewer dog walkers walked in their local park in the three US study sites. San Diego dog walkers walked more often in their neighborhood/week compared with Perth dog walkers (all p ≤ 0.05). In Portland, dog walkers perceived significantly more neighborhood problems and in Nashville dog walkers perceived a significantly higher level of neighborhood natural surveillance (i.e., 'eyes on the street'), compared with non-dog walkers (both p ≤ 0.05). Among dog walkers, females were more likely than males to feel safer walking with their dog in their neighborhood (OR = 2.49; 95 % CI = 1.76, 3.53). Compared with dog walkers in Perth, dog walkers from each of the US study sites felt safer in their neighborhood and perceived there was more neighborhood surveillance (all p ≤ 0.001).
This multi-site international study provides further support for the potential for dog walking to increase levels of daily physical activity. Walking with a dog may be a mechanism for increasing perceptions of neighborhood safety and getting to know the neighborhood, however significant between-country differences exist. Further international research is required to understand the drivers for these between-country differences. Community based programs and policies aimed at improving safety and social connectedness should consider the wider community benefits of dog walking and include strategies for supporting more dog walking.
我们研究了美国四个城市以及澳大利亚城市内部和之间遛狗与身体活动之间的关系,并调查了在美国和澳大利亚城市中遛狗是否与更高的安全感相关。
宠物关系研究中的狗主人(n = 1113)完成了一项横断面调查。数据在四个研究地点收集;美国的三个地点(圣地亚哥、纳什维尔、波特兰)和澳大利亚的一个地点(珀斯)。对每个研究地点的遛狗者和非遛狗者的身体活动、本地步行、遛狗情况以及个人和社区的安全感进行了分析。对遛狗者进行了城市间比较。
在所有研究地点,与非遛狗者相比,遛狗者每周与狗一起散步5 - 6次,每周总计93 - 109分钟,每周有更多天数达到≥30分钟的身体活动,并且每周更频繁地在其社区内行走(所有p≤0.01)。与珀斯相比,美国三个研究地点在当地公园遛狗的人明显更少。与珀斯的遛狗者相比,圣地亚哥的遛狗者每周更频繁地在其社区内行走(所有p≤0.05)。在波特兰,与非遛狗者相比,遛狗者明显感觉到更多的社区问题,而在纳什维尔,遛狗者感觉到社区自然监视(即“街道上的眼睛”)的水平明显更高(两者p≤0.05)。在遛狗者中,女性比男性更有可能在社区内与狗一起散步时感到更安全(OR = 2.49;95% CI = 1.76,3.53)。与珀斯的遛狗者相比,来自美国每个研究地点的遛狗者在其社区内感觉更安全,并且认为社区监视更多(所有p≤0.001)。
这项多地点国际研究为遛狗增加日常身体活动水平的潜力提供了进一步支持。与狗一起散步可能是增强社区安全感和了解社区的一种方式,然而国家之间存在显著差异。需要进一步的国际研究来了解这些国家间差异的驱动因素。旨在提高安全性和社会联系的社区项目和政策应考虑遛狗对更广泛社区的益处,并包括支持更多遛狗行为的策略。