Associations between local-area residential features and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA) may be mediated by individual-level health behaviors. Such indirect effects have rarely been tested. This study assessed whether individual-level self-reported physical activity mediated the influence of local-area descriptive norms and objectively expressed walkability on 10-year change in HbA. HbA was assessed three times for adults in a 10-year population-based biomedical cohort ( = 4056). Local-area norms specific to each participant were calculated, aggregating responses from a separate statewide surveillance survey for 1600 m road-network buffers centered on participant addresses (local prevalence of overweight/obesity (body mass index ≥25 kg/m²) and physical inactivity (<150 min/week)). Separate latent growth models estimated direct and indirect (through physical activity) effects of local-area exposures on change in HbA, accounting for spatial clustering and covariates (individual-level age, sex, smoking status, marital status, employment and education, and area-level median household income). HbA worsened over time. Local-area norms directly and indirectly predicted worsening HbA trajectories. Walkability was directly and indirectly protective of worsening HbA. Local-area descriptive norms and walkability influence cardiometabolic risk trajectory through individual-level physical activity. Efforts to reduce population cardiometabolic risk should consider the extent of local-area unhealthful behavioral norms and walkability in tailoring strategies to improve physical activity.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5615490 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14090953 | DOI Listing |
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