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Journal Article

Citation

Carroll SJ, Turrell G, Dale MJ, Daniel M. J. Transp. Health 2021; 22: e101122.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jth.2021.101122

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Introduction
Body size, a key risk factor for chronic diseases, is associated with longer commutes. This study assessed associations between residential proximity to capital city central business district (CBD), area-level commute distance, and individual-level body size (body mass index [BMI] and waist circumference [WC]), and whether commute distance partially explains associations between residential proximity and body size.
Methods
This study used 2017-18 National Health Survey (NHS) data for working adults (aged ≥15 years, n = 6394) residing in Australian capital cities. Measures included individual-level sociodemographic information and measured body size (BMI, WC), area-level (SA1) disadvantage, average commute distance, and population density. SA1-centroid distances to CBDs were calculated and grouped into tertiles. Multilevel linear regression models estimated city-specific associations between commute distance and body size, and residential proximity and body size, accounting for area clustering and sequentially adjusting for covariates.
Results
Commute distance was positively associated with BMI except in Adelaide and Darwin, and with WC in all cities except Darwin. Associations were largely unaffected by covariate adjustment in Sydney (β = 0.039, 95%CI: 0.004, 0.074) and Melbourne (β = 0.083, 95%CI: 0.045, 0.121) for BMI; and in Melbourne (β = 0.169, 95%CI: 0.074, 0.265) and Perth (β = 0.082, 95%CI: <0.001, 0.166) for WC. For other cities, associations were nullified. Distance to CBD was positively associated with BMI and WC in most cities, but robust to covariate adjustment (including commute distance) only in Darwin (BMI: middle tertile β = 1.60, 95%CI: 0.39, 2.81; WC: middle tertile β = 4.10, 95% CI: 0.45, 7.75) and Adelaide (WC: outer tertile β = 7.67, 95%CI: 2.65, 121.69).
Conclusion
Living in middle and outer areas of Australia's capital cities is associated with greater body size. Longer commute distance partially accounts for this association in some cities. Integrated multisector planning may help to reduce the association between residential distance to CBD and commute distance on body size and thus health.


Language: en

Keywords

Body size; Commuting distance; Obesity; Urban design; Urban sprawl

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