Built Environment and Its Influences on Walking among Older Women: Use of Standardized Geographic Units to Define Urban Forms

Consensus is lacking on specific and policy-relevant measures of neighborhood attributes that may affect health outcomes. To address this limitation, we created small standardized geographic units measuring the transit, commercial, and park area access, intersection, and population density for the P...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Environmental and Public Health 2012-01, Vol.2012 (2012), p.134-142
Hauptverfasser: Fu, Rongwei, Siu, Vivian W., Michael, Yvonne L., Bosworth, Mark, Hillier, Teresa A., Lambert, William E.
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container_end_page 142
container_issue 2012
container_start_page 134
container_title Journal of Environmental and Public Health
container_volume 2012
creator Fu, Rongwei
Siu, Vivian W.
Michael, Yvonne L.
Bosworth, Mark
Hillier, Teresa A.
Lambert, William E.
description Consensus is lacking on specific and policy-relevant measures of neighborhood attributes that may affect health outcomes. To address this limitation, we created small standardized geographic units measuring the transit, commercial, and park area access, intersection, and population density for the Portland, Oregon metropolitan area. Cluster analysis was used to identify six unique urban forms: central city, city periphery, suburb, urban fringe with poor commercial access, urban fringe with pool park access, and satellite city. The urban form information was linkable to the detailed physical activity, health, and socio-demographic data of 2,005 older women without the use of administrative boundaries. Evaluation of the relationship between urban forms and walking behavior indicates that older women residing in city center were more likely to walk than those living in city periphery, suburb communities, and urban fringe with poor commercial access; however, these women were not significantly more likely to walk compared to those residing in urban fringe with poor park access or satellite city. Utility of small standardized geographic units and clusters to measure and define built environment support research investigating the impact of built environment and health. The findings may inform environmental/policy interventions that shape communities and promote active living.
doi_str_mv 10.1155/2012/203141
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Siu et al.</rights><rights>COPYRIGHT 2012 John Wiley &amp; Sons, Inc.</rights><rights>Copyright © 2012 Vivian W. Siu et al. Vivian W. Siu et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.</rights><rights>Copyright © 2012 Vivian W. 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subjects Aged
Bone density
Cities
Cluster Analysis
Environment Design
Female
Health Behavior
Health Promotion
Humans
Medical research
Older people
Oregon
Parks & recreation areas
Residence Characteristics
Suburban Population
Urban Population
Walking
title Built Environment and Its Influences on Walking among Older Women: Use of Standardized Geographic Units to Define Urban Forms
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