Department of Community Health and Social Sciences, CUNY Graduate School of Public Health & Health Policy, New York, NY
Department of Psychological, Health, and Learning Sciences, College of Education, University of Houston, Houston, TX.
Diabetes Care. 2019 Jul;42(7):1241-1247. doi: 10.2337/dc18-2432. Epub 2019 May 21.
Leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) has been shown to prevent or delay the development of diabetes. However, little research exists examining how other domains of PA (e.g., occupation based [OPA] and transportation based [TPA]) are associated with diabetes prevalence across diverse racial/ethnic groups. We examined associations between OPA, TPA, and LTPA and diabetes prevalence and whether associations differed by race/ethnicity.
Participants in the 2011-2016 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) self-reported domain-specific PA. Diabetes status was determined by self-reported doctor/health professional-diagnosis of diabetes or a glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA) measurement of ≥6.5% (48 mmol/mol). Multivariable log binomial models examined differences in diabetes prevalence by PA level in each domain and total PA among Latinos ( = 3,931), non-Latino whites ( = 6,079), and non-Latino blacks ( = 3,659).
Whites reported the highest prevalence of achieving PA guidelines (64.9%), followed by Latinos (61.6%) and non-Latino blacks (60.9%; < 0.0009). Participants achieving PA guidelines were 19-32% less likely to have diabetes depending on PA domain in adjusted models. Diabetes prevalence was consistently higher among non-Latino blacks (17.1%) and Latinos (14.1%) compared with non-Latino whites (10.7%; < 0.0001), but interaction results showed the protective effect of PA was similar across PA domain and race/ethnicity-except within TPA, where the protective effect was 4% greater among non-Latino whites compared with Latinos (adjusted difference in risk differences 0.04, = 0.01).
PA policies and programs, beyond LTPA, can be leveraged to reduce diabetes prevalence among all population groups. Future studies are needed to confirm potentially differential effects of transportation-based active living on diabetes prevalence across race/ethnicity.
休闲时间体力活动(LTPA)已被证明可预防或延缓糖尿病的发生。然而,关于其他体力活动领域(例如,基于职业的体力活动[OPA]和基于交通的体力活动[TPA])与不同种族/族裔群体的糖尿病患病率之间的关系的研究甚少。我们研究了 OPA、TPA 和 LTPA 与糖尿病患病率之间的关系,以及这些关系是否因种族/族裔而异。
2011-2016 年全国健康和营养调查(NHANES)的参与者自我报告了特定领域的体力活动。糖尿病的状况通过自我报告的医生/健康专业人员诊断的糖尿病或糖化血红蛋白(HbA)测量值≥6.5%(48mmol/mol)来确定。多变量对数二项式模型检查了在每个领域的体力活动水平和总体力活动中,拉丁裔(n=3931)、非拉丁裔白种人(n=6079)和非拉丁裔黑人(n=3659)之间糖尿病患病率的差异。
白种人报告的达到体力活动指南的比例最高(64.9%),其次是拉丁裔(61.6%)和非拉丁裔黑人(60.9%;<0.0009)。在调整后的模型中,达到体力活动指南的参与者患糖尿病的可能性降低了 19-32%,具体取决于体力活动的领域。与非拉丁裔白种人(10.7%;<0.0001)相比,非拉丁裔黑人(17.1%)和拉丁裔(14.1%)的糖尿病患病率始终较高,但交互作用的结果表明,PA 的保护作用在各个 PA 领域和种族/族裔之间是相似的-除了 TPA 之外,在 TPA 中,非拉丁裔白种人比拉丁裔人的保护作用高出 4%(调整风险差异差异 0.04,=0.01)。
除了 LTPA 之外,还可以利用 PA 政策和计划来降低所有人群的糖尿病患病率。需要进一步的研究来证实交通相关的积极生活方式对不同种族/族裔的糖尿病患病率的潜在差异影响。