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Differential correlates of physical activity in urban and rural adults of various socioeconomic backgrounds in the United States

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TLDR
Both income level and urban rural status were important predictors of adults’ likelihood to meet physical activity recommendations, and evidence of a positive dose-response relation emerged between number of places to exercise and likelihood to met recommendations for physical activity.
Abstract
Study objectives: Few studies have analysed the rates and correlates of physical activity in economically and geographically diverse populations. Objectives were to examine: (1) urban-rural differences in physical activity by several demographic, geographical, environmental, and psychosocial variables, (2) patterns in environmental and policy factors across urban-rural setting and socioeconomic groups, (3) socioeconomic differences in physical activity across the same set of variables, and (4) possible correlations of these patterns with meeting of physical activity recommendations. Design: A cross sectional study with an over sampling of lower income adults was conducted in 1999–2000. Setting: United States. Participants: 1818 United States adults. Main results: Lower income residents were less likely than higher income residents to meet physical activity recommendations. Rural residents were least likely to meet recommendations; suburban residents were most likely to meet recommendations. Suburban, higher income residents were more than twice as likely to meet recommendations than rural, lower income residents. Significant differences across income levels and urban/rural areas were found for those reporting neighbourhood streets, parks, and malls as places to exercise; fear of injury, being in poor health, or dislike as barriers to exercise and those reporting encouragement from relatives as social support for exercise. Evidence of a positive dose-response relation emerged between number of places to exercise and likelihood to meet recommendations for physical activity. Conclusions: Both income level and urban rural status were important predictors of adults’ likelihood to meet physical activity recommendations. In addition, environmental variables vary in importance across socioeconomic status and urban-rural areas.

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Does social class predict diet quality

TL;DR: If higher SES is a causal determinant of diet quality, then the reported associations between diet quality and better health may have been confounded by unobserved indexes of social class, and some current strategies for health promotion, based on recommending high-cost foods to low-income people, may prove to be wholly ineffective.
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Inequality in the Built Environment Underlies Key Health Disparities in Physical Activity and Obesity

TL;DR: Assessment of the geographic and social distribution of PA facilities and how disparity in access might underlie population-level PA and overweight patterns in US adolescents found inequality in availability ofPA facilities may contribute to ethnic and SES disparities in PA and obese patterns.
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The built environment, neighborhood crime and constrained physical activity: An exploration of inconsistent findings

TL;DR: The quantitative evidence to date for the relationship between safety and constrained physical activity has received mixed support, and the evidence is somewhat inconsistent, and this may be partly attributed to measurement limitations.
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Availability of Physical Activity–Related Facilities and Neighborhood Demographic and Socioeconomic Characteristics: A National Study

TL;DR: Lack of availability of facilities that enable and promote physical activity may underpin the lower levels of activity observed among populations of low socioeconomic status and minority backgrounds.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of Obesity among Adults from Rural and Urban Areas of the United States: Findings from NHANES (2005-2008).

TL;DR: Obesity is markedly higher among adults from rural versus urban areas of the United States, with estimates that are much higher than the rates suggested by studies with self-reported data.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Healthy People 2010.

TL;DR: These objectives and their associated baseline data and targets for the year 2010 are presented and members of the MCH community are encouraged to review and comment on these objectives during the public comment period.
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The development of scales to measure social support for diet and exercise behaviors

TL;DR: These scales are among the first measures of social support behaviors specific to dietary- and exercise-habit change and correlated with respective self-reported dietary and exercise habits, providing evidence of concurrent criterion-related validity.
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Environmental and policy interventions to promote physical activity

TL;DR: In this article, a model describing the development of policy and environmental interventions is proposed, in the hope of stimulating more research in this area, and two studies showed that placing signs encouraging stair use can be effective.
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Environmental and Policy Determinants of Physical Activity in the United States

TL;DR: An array of environmental and policy determinants, particularly those related to the physical environment, are associated with physical activity and should be taken into account in the design of interventions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Personal and environmental factors associated with physical inactivity among different racial-ethnic groups of U.S. middle-aged and older-aged women.

TL;DR: In this paper, personal, program-based, and environmental barriers to physical activity were explored among a U.S. population-derived sample of 2,912 women 40 years of age and older.
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