Health Promotion & Policy Research Unit, University of Otago, PO BOX 7343, Wellington South, Wellington, 6242, New Zealand; Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard University, 677 Huntington Avenue, MA, 02115, USA.
Health Promotion & Policy Research Unit, University of Otago, PO BOX 7343, Wellington South, Wellington, 6242, New Zealand; Department of Geography, Environment & Spatial Sciences, Michigan State University, 673 Auditorium Road, East Lansing, MI, 48825, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2017 Nov;193:41-50. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.09.046. Epub 2017 Sep 28.
Defining the boundary of children's 'neighborhoods' has important implications for understanding the contextual influences on child health. Additionally, insight into activities that occur outside people's neighborhoods may indicate exposures that place-based studies cannot detect. This study aimed to 1) extend current neighborhood research, using data from wearable cameras and GPS devices that were worn over several days in an urban setting; 2) define the boundary of children's neighborhoods by using leisure time activity space data; and 3) determine the destinations visited by children in their leisure time, outside their neighborhoods.
One hundred and fourteen children (mean age 12y) from Wellington, New Zealand wore wearable cameras and GPS recorders. Residential Euclidean buffers at incremental distances were paired with GPS data (thereby identifying time spent in different places) to explore alternative definitions of neighborhood boundaries. Children's neighborhood boundary was at 500 m. A newly developed software application was used to identify 'destinations' visited outside the neighborhood by specifying space-time parameters. Image data from wearable cameras were used to determine the type of destination.
Children spent over half of their leisure time within 500 m of their homes. Children left their neighborhood predominantly to visit school (for leisure purposes), other residential locations (e.g. to visit friends) and food retail outlets (e.g. convenience stores, fast food outlets). Children spent more time at food retail outlets than at structured sport and in outdoor recreation locations combined.
Person-centered neighborhood definitions may serve to better represent children's everyday experiences and neighborhood exposures than previous methods based on place-based measures. As schools and other residential locations (friends and family) are important destinations outside the neighborhood, such destinations should be taken into account. The combination of image data and activity space GPS data provides a more robust approach to understanding children's neighborhoods and activity spaces.
界定儿童“邻里”的边界对于理解儿童健康的背景影响具有重要意义。此外,了解发生在邻里之外的活动可能表明,基于地点的研究无法发现的暴露。本研究旨在:1)利用在城市环境中佩戴数天的可穿戴摄像机和 GPS 设备的数据,扩展当前的邻里研究;2)通过休闲时间活动空间数据来定义儿童邻里的边界;3)确定儿童在其闲暇时间离开邻里时的目的地。
来自新西兰惠灵顿的 114 名儿童(平均年龄 12 岁)佩戴可穿戴摄像机和 GPS 记录器。将住宅欧几里得缓冲区与 GPS 数据进行配对(从而确定在不同地方花费的时间),以探索邻里边界的替代定义。儿童的邻里边界为 500m。使用新开发的软件应用程序,通过指定时空参数来识别邻里外的“目的地”。可穿戴摄像机的图像数据用于确定目的地的类型。
儿童在闲暇时间的一半以上时间都在距离家 500m 以内。儿童离开邻里主要是为了去学校(休闲目的)、其他居住地点(如拜访朋友)和食品零售店(如便利店、快餐店)。儿童在食品零售店花费的时间多于在有组织的体育活动和户外娱乐场所花费的时间总和。
以人为中心的邻里定义可能比基于地点的测量方法更好地代表儿童的日常体验和邻里暴露情况。由于学校和其他居住地点(朋友和家人)是邻里外的重要目的地,因此应考虑到这些目的地。图像数据和活动空间 GPS 数据的结合为理解儿童邻里和活动空间提供了更可靠的方法。