Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, 722 West 168th Street, New York, NY, 10032, USA.
Division of Epidemiology, Department of Population Health and Department of Environmental Medicine, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
J Urban Health. 2019 Aug;96(4):583-590. doi: 10.1007/s11524-019-00370-4.
To examine how urban form shapes physical activity and health over time, a measure of neighborhood walkability is needed that can be linked to cohort studies with participants living across the United States (U.S.) that have been followed over the past decades. The Built Environment and Health-Neighborhood Walkability Index (BEH-NWI), a measure of neighborhood walkability that can be calculated for communities across the United States between 1990 and 2015, was conceptualized, developed, and tested using data from the New York City Tri-State Area. BEH-NWI measures were created for 1990 and 2010 using historical data on population density, street intersection density, density of rail stops, and density of pedestrian trip generating/supporting establishments. BEH-NWI scores were calculated for 1-km buffers around the 1990 residences of NYU Women's Health Study (NYUWHS) participants and NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene's Physical Activity and Transit (PAT) survey participants enrolled in 2011. Higher neighborhood BEH-NWI scores were significantly associated with greater self-reported walking per week (+ 0.31 MET-hours/week per unit BEH-NWI, 95% CI 0.23, 0.36) and lower body mass index (- 0.17 BMI units per unit BEH-NWI, 95% - 0.23, - 0.12) among NYUWHS participants. Higher neighborhood BEH-NWI scores were associated with significantly higher accelerometer-measured physical activity among PAT survey participants (39% more minutes of moderate-intensity equivalent activity/week across the interquartile range of BEH-NWI, 95% CI 21%, 60%). The BEH-NWI can be calculated using historical data going back to 1990, and BEH-NWI scores predict BMI, weekly walking, and physical activity in two NYC area datasets.
为了研究城市形态如何随时间推移影响身体活动和健康,需要有一种能够衡量邻里可达性的指标,该指标可以与在美国各地居住、过去几十年一直被跟踪的队列研究相关联。 邻里可达性的衡量指标“构建环境与健康-邻里可达性指数”(BEH-NWI)是在美国 1990 年至 2015 年之间的社区计算得出的,它是使用来自纽约市三州地区的数据构想、开发和测试的。BEH-NWI 指标是使用历史人口密度、街道交叉口密度、铁路站密度和行人出行生成/支持设施密度数据为 1990 年和 2010 年创建的。BEH-NWI 分数是为 1990 年居住在纽约大学妇女健康研究(NYUWHS)参与者和纽约市卫生局和心理健康部的物理活动和交通(PAT)调查参与者的 1990 年住所周围 1 公里缓冲区计算的,这些参与者于 2011 年注册。邻里 BEH-NWI 得分越高,每周自我报告的步行量越大(每单位 BEH-NWI 增加 0.31 MET 小时/周,95%CI 0.23,0.36),NYUWHS 参与者的体重指数越低(每单位 BEH-NWI 减少 0.17 BMI 单位,95%CI -0.23,-0.12)。在 PAT 调查参与者中,邻里 BEH-NWI 得分越高,与使用加速度计测量的身体活动显著相关(BEH-NWI 四分位间距内每周中度强度等效活动增加 39%,95%CI 21%,60%)。BEH-NWI 可以使用回溯至 1990 年的历史数据进行计算,并且 BEH-NWI 分数可以预测 BMI、每周步行和两个纽约市地区数据集的身体活动。