de Sá Thiago Hérick, de Rezende Leandro Fórnias Machado, Borges Maria Carolina, Nakamura Priscila Missaki, Anapolsky Sebastian, Parra Diana, Adami Fernando, Monteiro Carlos Augusto
Department of Nutrition, School of Public Health Universidade de São Paulo São Paulo Brazil Department of Nutrition, School of Public Health, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
Department of Preventive Medicine, School of Medicine Universidade de São Paulo São Paulo Brazil Department of Preventive Medicine, School of Medicine, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
Rev Panam Salud Publica. 2017 Mar 23;41:e35. doi: 10.26633/RPSP.2017.35. eCollection 2017.
To describe the prevalence of "active" (self-propelled, human-powered) transportation in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region over the past decade.
MEDLINE, Excerpta Medica (Embase), SportDiscus, Lilacs, MediCarib, Web of Science, OVID, CINAHL, Scopus, Google Scholar, National Transportation Library, and TRIS/TRID were searched for articles on active transportation published between January 2003 and December 2014 with (at least) a title and abstract in English, Portuguese, or Spanish. Research was included in the study if the two reviewing authors agreed it 1) was conducted in an adult sample (≥ 18 years old), 2) was designed to be representative of any LAC area, and 3) reported at least one measure of active transportation. Reference lists of included papers and retrieved reviews were also checked. A total of 129 key informants (87 scientific experts and 42 government authorities) were contacted to identify additional candidate publications. Two other authors extracted the data independently.
A total of 10 459 unique records were found; the full texts of 143 were reviewed; and a total of 45 studies were included in the study, yielding estimates for 72 LAC settings, most of which were in Argentina, Brazil, and Colombia. No eligible studies were found for the years 2003-2004, resulting in a 10-year study time frame. Estimates were available for walking, cycling, or the combination of both, with a high degree of heterogeneity (heterogeneity index (I2) ≥ 99%). The median prevalence of active transportation (combining walking and cycling) was 12.0%, ranging from 5.1% (in Palmas, Brazil) to 58.9% (in Rio Claro, Brazil). Men cycled more than women in all regions for which information was available. The opposite was true for walking.
Prevalence of active transportation in LAC varied widely, with great heterogeneity and uneven distribution of studies across countries, indicating the need for efforts to build comprehensive surveillance systems with standardized, timely, and detailed estimates of active transportation in order to support policy planning and evaluation.
描述过去十年中拉丁美洲和加勒比地区(LAC)“主动式”(自行推进、人力驱动)出行方式的流行情况。
检索MEDLINE、医学文摘数据库(Embase)、体育文献数据库(SportDiscus)、拉丁美洲和加勒比卫生科学数据库(Lilacs)、加勒比医学数据库(MediCarib)、科学引文索引数据库(Web of Science)、OVID、护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL)、Scopus、谷歌学术、国家交通图书馆以及交通运输研究信息数据库(TRIS/TRID),查找2003年1月至2014年12月期间发表的关于主动式出行的文章,要求文章(至少)标题和摘要为英文、葡萄牙文或西班牙文。若两位评审作者认为某项研究符合以下条件,则纳入本研究:1)研究对象为成年人样本(≥18岁);2)旨在代表LAC地区的任何区域;3)报告了至少一项主动式出行的测量指标。还检查了纳入论文和检索到的综述的参考文献列表。共联系了129名关键信息提供者(87名科学专家和42名政府当局人员)以确定其他候选出版物。另外两位作者独立提取数据。
共找到10459条独特记录;对其中143篇的全文进行了审阅;共纳入45项研究,得出了72个LAC地区的估计数据,其中大部分来自阿根廷、巴西和哥伦比亚。未找到2003 - 2004年符合条件的研究,因此研究时间框架为10年。可获得步行、骑自行车或两者结合方式的估计数据,异质性程度较高(异质性指数(I2)≥99%)。主动式出行(步行和骑自行车相结合)的患病率中位数为12.0%,范围从5.1%(巴西帕尔马斯)到58.9%(巴西里奥克拉鲁)。在所有有信息的地区,男性骑自行车的比例高于女性。步行情况则相反。
LAC地区主动式出行的患病率差异很大,异质性高,且各国研究分布不均衡,这表明需要努力建立全面的监测系统,对主动式出行进行标准化、及时且详细的估计,以支持政策规划和评估。