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Weekend and weekday associations between the residential built environment and physical activity: findings from the ENABLE-London study

Authors :
Clary, Christelle
Lewis, Daniel
Limb, Elizabeth
Nightingale, Claire M.
Ram, Bina
Rudnicka, Alicja R.
Procter, Duncan
Page, Angie S.
Coopen, Ashley R.
Ellaway, Anne
Giles-Corti, Billie
Whincup, Peter
Cook, Derek G.
Owen, Christopher G.
Cummins, Steven
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Public Library of Science, 2020.

Abstract

Background:\ud We assessed whether the residential built environment was associated with physical activity (PA) differently on weekdays and weekends, and contributed to socio-economic differences in PA.\ud \ud Methods:\ud Measures of PA and walkability, park proximity and public transport accessibility were derived for baseline participants (n = 1,064) of the Examining Neighbourhood Activities in Built Living Environments in London (ENABLE London) Study. Multilevel-linear-regressions examined associations between weekend and weekday steps and Moderate to Vigorous PA (MVPA), residential built environment factors, and housing tenure status as a proxy for socio-economic position.\ud \ud Results:\ud A one-unit decrease in walkability was associated with 135 (95% CI [28; 242]) fewer steps and 1.2 (95% CI [0.3; 2.1]) fewer minutes of MVPA on weekend days, compared with little difference in steps and minutes of MVPA observed on weekdays. A 1km-increase in distance to the nearest local park was associated with 597 (95% CI [161; 1032]) more steps and 4.7 (95% CI [1.2; 8.2]) more minutes of MVPA on weekend days; 84 fewer steps (95% CI [-253;420]) and 0.3 fewer minutes of MVPA (95%CI [-2.3, 3.0]) on weekdays. Lower public transport accessibility was associated with increased steps on a weekday (767 steps, 95%CI [–13,1546]) compared with fewer steps on weekend days (608 fewer steps, 95% CI [–44, 1658]). None of the associations between built environment factors and PA on either weekend or weekdays were modified by socio-economic status. However, socio-economic differences in PA related moderately to socio-economic disparities in PA-promoting features of the residential neighbourhood.\ud \ud Conclusions:\ud The residential built environment is associated with PA differently at weekends and on weekdays, and contributes moderately to socio-economic differences in PA.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....0164eb3e8b5527d8065ef97ddd5ad84c