Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA.
Department of Primary Care, James J Peters VA Medical Center, Bronx, NY 10468, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2019 Jan 8;16(1):151. doi: 10.3390/ijerph16010151.
Physical inactivity increases risk of chronic disease. Few studies examine how built environment interventions increase physical activity (PA). Active design (AD) utilizes strategies in affordable housing to improve resident health. We assessed how AD housing affects PA among low-income families in Brooklyn, New York. Participants were recruited at lease signings in 2016 from a new AD apartment complex and two recently renovated comparison buildings without AD features. Eligibility included age ≥18 years with no contraindications to exercise. Anthropometric data were collected. PA was self-reported using the Recent and Global Physical Activity Questionnaires. Smartphone users shared their tracked step. Data collection was repeated one year after move-in. All data were analyzed using SPSS. Eighty-eight eligible participants completed the initial questionnaire (36 AD and 52 from 2 comparison buildings) at baseline (T0). There were no differences between AD and comparison cohorts in: stair use, PA, sitting time or, mean waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) at T0. However, the AD cohort had a lower baseline BMI (27.6 vs. 31.0, = 0.019). At one-year follow-up (T1), 75 participants completed our survey including a 64% retention rate among those who previously completed the T0 questionnaire. Among T0 questionnaire respondents, mean daily steps increased at T1 among AD participants who moved from an elevator building (∆6782, = 0.051) and in the comparison group (∆2960, = 0.023). Aggregate moderate work-related activity was higher at T1 in the AD building (746 vs. 401, = 0.031). AD building women reported more work-related PA overall but AD men engaged in more moderate recreational PA. Living in an AD building can enhance low-income residents' PA. More research with objective measures is needed to identify strategies to sustain higher PA levels and overall health.
缺乏运动增加慢性病风险。很少有研究探讨如何通过改善建筑环境来增加身体活动。积极设计(AD)利用经济适用房中策略来改善居民健康。我们评估了在纽约布鲁克林的低收入家庭中,AD 住房对身体活动的影响。2016 年,在新的 AD 公寓楼和两个最近没有 AD 功能的翻新对比楼的租赁签约时招募参与者。合格标准包括年龄≥18 岁,没有运动禁忌症。收集人体测量数据。身体活动使用最近和全球身体活动问卷进行自我报告。智能手机用户分享他们的计步数据。入住后一年重复收集数据。所有数据均使用 SPSS 进行分析。88 名符合条件的参与者在基线(T0)时完成了初始问卷(AD 组 36 人,对比楼 52 人)。AD 组和对比组在楼梯使用、身体活动、久坐时间或 T0 时平均腰臀比(WHR)方面没有差异。然而,AD 组的基线 BMI 较低(27.6 与 31.0, = 0.019)。在一年的随访(T1)中,75 名参与者完成了我们的调查,其中包括之前完成 T0 问卷的参与者中有 64%的保留率。在 T0 问卷的回答者中,从电梯楼搬到 AD 楼的 AD 组参与者的 T1 日平均步数增加(∆6782, = 0.051),在对比组中增加(∆2960, = 0.023)。在 AD 楼中,总工作相关中度身体活动在 T1 更高(746 与 401, = 0.031)。AD 楼中的女性总体报告的工作相关身体活动更多,但 AD 楼中的男性参与更多的中度娱乐性身体活动。居住在 AD 楼可以提高低收入居民的身体活动水平。需要更多使用客观测量的研究来确定维持更高身体活动水平和整体健康的策略。