Interactions of individual perceived barriers and neighbourhood destinations with obesity-related behaviours in Europe

Archive ouverte

Mackenbach, J. D. | Lakerveld, J. | van Lenthe, F. J. | Teixeira, P. J. | Compernolle, S. | de Bourdeaudhuij, I. | Charreire, Hélène | Oppert, J.-M. | Bárdos, H. | Glonti, K. | Rutter, H. | Mckee, M. | Nijpels, G. | Brug, J.

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

National audience. Perceived barriers towards physical activity and healthy eating as well as local availability of opportunities (destinations in the neighbourhood) are important determinants of obesity-related behaviours in adults. Little is known, however, about how these factors interact with the behaviours. Data were analysed from 5,205 participants of the SPOTLIGHT survey, conducted in 60 neighbourhoods in urban regions of five different countries across Europe. A virtual audit was conducted to collect data on the presence of destinations in each neighbourhood. Direct associations of, and interactions between, the number of individual perceived barriers and presence of destinations with obesity-related behaviours (physical activity and dietary behaviours) were analysed using multilevel regression analyses, adjusted for key covariates. Perceiving more individual barriers towards physical activity and healthy eating was associated with lower odds of physical activity and healthy eating. The presence of destinations such as bicycle lanes, parks and supermarkets was associated with higher levels of physical activity and healthier dietary behaviours. Analyses of additive interaction terms suggested that the interaction of destinations and barriers was competitive, such that the presence of destinations influenced obesity-related behaviours most among those perceiving more barriers. These explorative findings emphasize the interest and importance of combining objective (e.g. virtual neighbourhood audit) methods and subjective (e.g. individual perceived barriers collected in a survey) to better understand how the characteristics of the residential built environment can shape obesity-related behaviours depending on individual characteristics.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Exploring why residents of socioeconomically deprived neighbourhoods have less favourable perceptions of their neighbourhood environment than residents of wealthy neighbourhoods

Archive ouverte | Mackenbach, J. D. | CCSD

International audience. Residents of socioeconomically deprived areas perceive their neighbourhood as less conducive to healthy behaviours than residents of more affluent areas. Whether these unfavourable perception...

The relation between sleep duration and sedentary behaviours in European adults

Archive ouverte | Lakerveld, J. | CCSD

National audience. Too much sitting, and both short and long sleep duration are associated with obesity, but little is known on the nature of the relations between these behaviours. We therefore examined the associa...

Mismatch between perceived and objectively measured environmental obesogenic features in European neighbourhoods

Archive ouverte | Roda, C. | CCSD

International audience. Findings from research on the association between the built environment and obesity remain equivocal but may be partly explained by differences in approaches used to characterize the built en...

Chargement des enrichissements...