A novel method to map community- and neighborhood-level access to rural physical activity built environments in the United States
•Rural families report limited access to infrastructure that supports physical activity (PA)•Rural PA built environments may differ at community- and neighborhood-levels.•Geospatial mapping captures unique aspects of given rural PA built environments.•A community- and neighborhood-level grouping str...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Preventive medicine reports 2022-12, Vol.30, p.102066, Article 102066 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Rural families report limited access to infrastructure that supports physical activity (PA)•Rural PA built environments may differ at community- and neighborhood-levels.•Geospatial mapping captures unique aspects of given rural PA built environments.•A community- and neighborhood-level grouping strategy identifies within-rural differences.•Distance to and density of PA infrastructure varies across rural communities and neighborhoods.
Physical activity (PA) built environments may support PA among rural youth and families. In the United States (U.S.), differences between rural and urban PA built environments are assessed using coarse scale, county-level methods. However, this method insufficiently examines environmental differences within rural counties. The present study uses rural-specific geospatial mapping techniques and a fine scale, within-rural grouping strategy to identify differing levels of access to the PA built environment among a rural sample. First, PA infrastructure variables (parks, sidewalks) within a rural region of the Midwest U.S. were mapped. Then, households (N = 112) of participants in the NU-HOME study, a childhood obesity prevention trial, were categorized to community-level and neighborhood-level PA built environment groups using two access indicators; Rural-Urban Commuting Area (RUCA) codes and Walk Scores®, respectively. Finally, households were categorized to new groups that combined community-level RUCA codes and neighborhood-level Walk Scores® to indicate the diverse ways in which rural families might access PA built environments, including by vehicle travel and pedestrian commuting. Household access to PA infrastructure (per geospatial proximity and density analyses), parent perceptions of the PA environment, and child PA were examined across the new combined access groups. All measures of household access to PA infrastructure significantly differed by group (p |
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ISSN: | 2211-3355 2211-3355 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.pmedr.2022.102066 |