The relationship between neighbourhood built characteristics, physical activity, and health-related fitness in urban dwelling Canadian adults: A mediation analysis.

Prev Med

Department of Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Canada; O'Brien Institute for Public Health, University of Calgary, Canada; Libin Cardiovascular Institute, University of Calgary, Canada.

Published: August 2024

Objective: Physical activity supportive environments have the potential to promote health-related fitness in adults. However, the extent to which neighbourhood built characteristics promote health-related fitness via physical activity has received little research attention. Therefore, our objective was to estimate the indirect and direct effects between neighbourhood built characteristics and health-related fitness mediated by physical activity.

Methods: Using cross-sectional data collected between 2014 and 2019, we merged neighbourhood built characteristics, physical activity, and health-related fitness variables, derived from two Canadian national databases. Using these data, we estimated sex-stratified covariate-adjusted path models (males: n = 983 to 2796 and females: n = 962 to 2835) to assess if accelerometer-measured light, moderate, and vigorous intensity physical activity mediated associations between objectively measured neighbourhood built characteristics (intersection density, dwelling density, points of interest, and transit density) and health-related fitness (grip strength, jump height, V̇O, and flexibility). Across 16 sex-specific models, we estimated 48 indirect and 16 direct effects.

Results: Concerning significant associations, for males we found that 16.6% of indirect and 18.8% of direct were negative and 4.2% of indirect and 0% of direct were positive. For females, we found that 12.5% of indirect and 0% of direct were negative and 0% of indirect and 25% of direct effects were positive.

Conclusions: Individual Canadian Active Living Environment built characteristics are positively associated with moderate-intensity physical activity and negatively associated with light-intensity physical activity. Further, associations between activity friendly neighbourhood characteristics and health related-fitness may be distinct from physical activity.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ypmed.2024.108037DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

physical activity
32
built characteristics
24
health-related fitness
24
neighbourhood built
20
indirect direct
16
physical
9
activity
9
characteristics physical
8
activity health-related
8
promote health-related
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!