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Associations between Walk Score and objective measures of physical activity in urban overweight and obese women
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, Vol 14, Iss 3, p e0214092 (2019), PLoS ONE
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2019.
-
Abstract
- The purpose of this study was to examine associations between the Walk Score and physical activity in young, overweight/obese urban women. Project Health included 45 White or African American women (BMI 31.5±3.9 kg/m2; age 26.5±4.6 years; 62% African American) living in the Boston area. An accelerometer estimated steps/day and mins/day in light physical activity (100–2019 counts-per-minute) and moderate-to-vigorous-physical activity (≥2020 cpm). Walk Score was used to estimate the walkability of home address by analyzing proximity to nearby amenities. General linear regression models estimated associations between total Walk Score and physical activity (light physical activity, moderate-to-vigorous-physical activity, steps, total activity counts, METs), adjusting for body mass index, age, race/ethnicity, seasonality, wear time, employment and student status. For physical activity variables that had significant associations with Walk Score (steps/day and steps/min), regression models were estimated for Walk Score sub-scores (parks, grocery, errands, shopping, dining/drinking, culture/entertainment and schools). Logistic regression models estimated the odds of meeting the guidelines for steps (≥10,000/day) and moderate-to-vigorous-physical activity (≥150mins MVPA/week) based on Walk Score. Participants had a Walk Score of 63.9±26.4, took 14,143±3,934 steps/day, and spent 206.2±66.0 mins/day in light physical activity and 46.7±17.5 mins/day in moderate-to-vigorous- physical activity. Walk Score was significantly and positively associated with steps/day (β = 51.4, p = 0.01) and steps/min (β = 0.06, p = 0.009) but was not associated with mins/day of light physical activity, moderate-to-vigorous-physical activity, total activity counts or METs. Parks, grocery, errands, shopping, dining/drinking, and culture/entertainment Walk Score sub-scores were significantly associated with steps and steps/min (all p
- Subjects :
- Urban Population
Physiology
Social Sciences
Walking
Overweight
Logistic regression
Body Mass Index
Sociology
Medicine and Health Sciences
Medicine
Public and Occupational Health
Schools
Multidisciplinary
Geography
Regression analysis
Sports Science
Physiological Parameters
Walkability
Engineering and Technology
Neighborhoods
Female
medicine.symptom
Research Article
Adult
Science
Human Geography
Models, Biological
White People
Education
Odds
Linear regression
Humans
Obesity
Sports and Exercise Medicine
Exercise
Biological Locomotion
business.industry
Body Weight
Biology and Life Sciences
Physical Activity
medicine.disease
Black or African American
Physical Fitness
Earth Sciences
Electronics
Accelerometers
business
human activities
Body mass index
Demography
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 14
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PLOS ONE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e8720dfa71eaed2180e62c4f6181f19d