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  5. Obesogenic Neighborhood Environments, Child and Parent Obesity

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Article
English
2012

Obesogenic Neighborhood Environments, Child and Parent Obesity

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0 Files

English
2012
American Journal of Preventive Medicine
Vol 42 (5)
DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2012.02.008

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James Sallis
James Sallis

University Of California, San Diego

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Brian E. Saelens
James Sallis
Lawrence D. Frank
+6 more

Abstract

Background Identifying neighborhood environment attributes related to childhood obesity can inform environmental changes for obesity prevention. Purpose To evaluate child and parent weight status across neighborhoods in King County (Seattle metropolitan area) and San Diego County differing in GIS-defined physical activity environment (PAE) and nutrition environment (NE) characteristics. Methods Neighborhoods were selected to represent high (favorable) versus low (unfavorable) on the two measures, forming four neighborhood types (low on both measures, low PAE/high NE, high PAE/low NE, and high on both measures). Weight and height of children aged 6–11 years and one parent (n=730) from selected neighborhoods were assessed in 2007–2009. Differences in child and parent overweight and obesity by neighborhood type were examined, adjusting for neighborhood-, family-, and individual-level demographics. Results Children from neighborhoods high on both environment measures were less likely to be obese (7.7% vs 15.9%, OR=0.44, p=0.02) and marginally less likely to be overweight (23.7% vs 31.7%, OR=0.67, p=0.08) than children from neighborhoods low on both measures. In models adjusted for parent weight status and demographic factors, neighborhood environment type remained related to child obesity (high vs low on both measures, OR=0.41, p<0.03). Parents in neighborhoods high on both measures (versus low on both) were marginally less likely to be obese (20.1% vs 27.7%, OR=0.66, p=0.08), although parent overweight did not differ by neighborhood environment. The lower odds of parent obesity in neighborhoods with environments supportive of physical activity and healthy eating remained in models adjusted for demographics (high vs low on the environment measures, OR=0.57, p=0.053). Conclusions Findings support the proposed GIS-based definitions of obesogenic neighborhoods for children and parents that consider both physical activity and nutrition environment features.

How to cite this publication

Brian E. Saelens, James Sallis, Lawrence D. Frank, Sarah C. Couch, Chuan Zhou, Trina Colburn, Kelli L. Cain, James E. Chapman, Karen Glanz (2012). Obesogenic Neighborhood Environments, Child and Parent Obesity. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 42(5), pp. e57-e64, DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2012.02.008.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2012

Authors

9

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

American Journal of Preventive Medicine

DOI

10.1016/j.amepre.2012.02.008

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