J Acad Nutr Diet. 2017 Oct;117(10):1618-1627. doi: 10.1016/j.jand.2017.04.012. Epub 2017 Jun 9.
Few studies have been conducted in rural areas assessing the influence of community-level environmental factors on residents' success improving lifestyle behaviors.
Our aim was to examine whether 6-month changes in diet, physical activity, and weight were moderated by the food and physical activity environment in a rural adult population receiving an intervention designed to improve diet and physical activity.
We examined associations between self-reported and objectively measured changes in diet, physical activity, and weight, and perceived and objectively measured food and physical activity environments. Participants were followed for 6 months.
PARTICIPANTS/SETTING: Participants were enrolled in the Heart Healthy Lenoir Project, a lifestyle intervention study conducted in Lenoir County, located in rural southeastern North Carolina. Sample sizes ranged from 132 to 249, depending on the availability of the data.
Participants received four counseling sessions that focused on healthy eating (adapted Mediterranean diet pattern) and increasing physical activity.
Density of and distance to food and physical activity venues, modified food environment index, Walk Score, crime, and perceived nutrition and physical activity neighborhood barriers were the potential mediating factors.
Diet quality, physical activity, and weight loss were the outcomes measured.
Statistical analyses included correlation and linear regression and controlling for potential confounders (baseline values of the dependent variables, age, race, education, and sex).
In adjusted analysis, there was an inverse association between weight change and the food environment, suggesting that participants who lived in a less-healthy food environment lost more weight during the 6-month intervention period (P=0.01). Also, there was a positive association between self-reported physical activity and distance to private gyms (P=0.04) and an inverse association between private gym density and pedometer-measured steps (P=0.03), indicating that those who lived farther from gyms and in areas with lower density of gyms had greater increases in physical activity and steps, respectively.
Contrary to our hypotheses, results indicated that those living in less-favorable food and physical activity environments had greater improvements in diet, physical activity, and weight, compared to those living in more favorable environments. Additional research should be undertaken to address these paradoxical findings and, if confirmed, to better understand them.
很少有研究在农村地区评估社区环境因素对居民改善生活方式行为的影响。
我们的目的是检验在一个接受旨在改善饮食和体育活动的干预措施的农村成年人中,饮食、身体活动和体重的 6 个月变化是否受到食物和身体活动环境的调节。
我们检查了自我报告和客观测量的饮食、身体活动和体重变化与感知和客观测量的食物和身体活动环境之间的关联。参与者随访 6 个月。
参与者/设置:参与者参加了位于北卡罗来纳州东南部农村地区莱诺县的“心脏健康莱诺项目”,这是一项生活方式干预研究。根据数据的可用性,样本量从 132 到 249 不等。
参与者接受了四次咨询,重点是健康饮食(适应地中海饮食模式)和增加身体活动。
食物和身体活动场所的密度和距离、改良的食物环境指数、步行分数、犯罪以及感知的营养和身体活动邻里障碍是潜在的调节因素。
饮食质量、身体活动和体重减轻是测量的结果。
统计分析包括相关性和线性回归,并控制了潜在的混杂因素(因变量的基线值、年龄、种族、教育和性别)。
在调整分析中,体重变化与食物环境呈负相关,这表明在 6 个月的干预期间,生活在健康食物环境较差的参与者体重减轻更多(P=0.01)。此外,自我报告的身体活动与私人健身房的距离呈正相关(P=0.04),私人健身房密度与计步器测量的步数呈负相关(P=0.03),这表明那些离健身房较远且健身房密度较低的人身体活动和步数分别增加较多。
与我们的假设相反,结果表明,与生活在更有利的食物和身体活动环境中的人相比,生活在较不利的食物和身体活动环境中的人在饮食、身体活动和体重方面有更大的改善。应该进行更多的研究来解决这些矛盾的发现,如果得到证实,应该更好地理解它们。