Masihay Akbar Hasti, Turin Tanvir C, Olstad Dana Lee, McCormack Gavin R
Department of Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Institute for Public Health, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
J Migr Health. 2024 Nov 19;10:100285. doi: 10.1016/j.jmh.2024.100285. eCollection 2024.
We aimed to 1) estimate the differences in transportation (TPA) and leisure physical activity (LPA) participation and duration between Canadian-born and immigrant adults, and 2) examine whether associations between neighbourhood walkability and physical activity differ by residency status.
We linked Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS; 2017-2018) with Canadian Active Living Environment (2016) data. Participants were urban Canadian-born or immigrant adults (recent: <10 years, established: ≥10 years). Walkability was calculated from counts of neighbourhood intersections, dwellings, and points of interest. Covariate-adjusted Generalized Linear Models estimated the odds ratios (OR) for participation and unstandardized β for minutes of weekly TPA and LPA by residency status with and without adjustment for walkability and for walkability-by-residency interactions.
Recent (OR: 1.25, 95%CI: 1.09, 1.43) and established immigrants (OR: 1.11, 95%CI: 1.02, 1.20) were more likely than Canadian-born to participate in TPA, but these differences attenuated after controlling for walkability. Recent (OR: 0.58, 95%CI: 0.51, 0.67) and established immigrants (OR: 0.81, 95%CI: 0.74, 0.89) were less likely than Canadian-born to participate in LPA, independent of walkability. Recent (β: -20.61, 95%CI: -37.89, -3.34) and established immigrants (β: -18.85, 95%CI: -28.69, -9.00) undertook fewer LPA minutes than Canadian-born, which attenuated after controlling for walkability. Despite being higher in magnitude among Canadian-born, walkability was positively associated with TPA participation and duration regardless of residency status.
Immigrants engaged in more TPA and less LPA than Canadian-born but adjusting for walkability attenuated TPA differences between residency groups. Walkability was positively associated with TPA, with different magnitude between residency groups.
我们旨在1)估计加拿大出生的成年人与移民成年人在交通性身体活动(TPA)和休闲性身体活动(LPA)参与情况及时长方面的差异,以及2)研究邻里可达性与身体活动之间的关联是否因居住身份不同而有所差异。
我们将加拿大社区健康调查(CCHS;2017 - 2018年)与加拿大积极生活环境(2016年)数据相链接。参与者为加拿大城市出生的成年人或移民成年人(新移民:<10年,老移民:≥10年)。可达性根据邻里交叉路口、住宅和兴趣点的数量计算得出。协变量调整后的广义线性模型估计了按居住身份划分的参与的优势比(OR)以及每周TPA和LPA分钟数的非标准化β值,分别在调整和未调整可达性以及可达性与居住身份交互作用的情况下进行。
新移民(OR:1.25,95%CI:1.09,1.43)和老移民(OR:1.11,95%CI:1.02,1.20)比加拿大出生的成年人更有可能参与TPA,但在控制可达性后这些差异有所减弱。新移民(OR:0.58,95%CI:0.51,0.67)和老移民(OR:0.81,95%CI:0.74,0.89)比加拿大出生的成年人参与LPA的可能性更小,与可达性无关。新移民(β:-20.61,95%CI:-37.89,-3.34)和老移民(β:-18.85,95%CI:-28.69,-9.00)的LPA分钟数比加拿大出生的成年人少,在控制可达性后这种差异有所减弱。尽管在加拿大出生的成年人中可达性影响程度更高,但无论居住身份如何,可达性与TPA参与情况和时长均呈正相关。
与加拿大出生的成年人相比,移民参与TPA更多而参与LPA更少,但调整可达性后减弱了居住群体之间TPA的差异。可达性与TPA呈正相关,居住群体之间的影响程度不同。