Associations of multidimensional socioeconomic and built environment factors with body mass index trajectories among youth in geographically heterogeneous communities

Understanding contextual influences on obesity requires comparison of heterogeneous communities and concurrent assessment of multiple contextual domains. We used a theoretically-based measurement model to assess multidimensional socioeconomic and built environment factors theorized to influence chil...

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Main Authors: Melissa N. Poulsen, Thomas A. Glass, Jonathan Pollak, Karen Bandeen-Roche, Annemarie G. Hirsch, Lisa Bailey-Davis, Brian S. Schwartz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-09-01
Series:Preventive Medicine Reports
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335519301135
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spelling doaj-0fa8870342aa422aa978726ae935de802020-11-25T03:34:58ZengElsevierPreventive Medicine Reports2211-33552019-09-0115Associations of multidimensional socioeconomic and built environment factors with body mass index trajectories among youth in geographically heterogeneous communitiesMelissa N. Poulsen0Thomas A. Glass1Jonathan Pollak2Karen Bandeen-Roche3Annemarie G. Hirsch4Lisa Bailey-Davis5Brian S. Schwartz6Department of Epidemiology and Health Services Research, Geisinger, 100 North Academy Avenue, Danville, PA 17822, USA; Corresponding author at: MC 44-00, 100 North Academy Avenue, Danville, PA 17822, USA.Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USADepartment of Environmental Health and Engineering, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USADepartment of Biostatistics, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USADepartment of Epidemiology and Health Services Research, Geisinger, 100 North Academy Avenue, Danville, PA 17822, USADepartment of Epidemiology and Health Services Research, Geisinger, 100 North Academy Avenue, Danville, PA 17822, USA; Obesity Institute, Geisinger, 100 North Academy Avenue, Danville, PA 17822, USADepartment of Epidemiology and Health Services Research, Geisinger, 100 North Academy Avenue, Danville, PA 17822, USA; Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA; Department of Environmental Health and Engineering, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA; Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 733 N. Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205, USAUnderstanding contextual influences on obesity requires comparison of heterogeneous communities and concurrent assessment of multiple contextual domains. We used a theoretically-based measurement model to assess multidimensional socioeconomic and built environment factors theorized to influence childhood obesity across a diverse geography ranging from rural to urban. Confirmatory factor analysis specified four factors—community socioeconomic deprivation (CSED), food outlet abundance (FOOD), fitness and recreational assets (FIT), and utilitarian physical activity favorability (UTIL)—which were assigned to communities (townships, boroughs, city census tracts) in 37 Pennsylvania counties. Using electronic health records from 2001 to 2012 from 163,820 youth aged 3–18 years from 1288 communities, we conducted multilevel linear regression analyses with factor quartiles and their cross products with age, age2, and age3 to test whether community factors impacted body mass index (BMI) growth trajectories. Models controlled for sex, age, race/ethnicity, and Medical Assistance. Factor scores were lowest in townships, indicating less deprivation, fewer food and physical activity outlets, and lower utilitarian physical activity favorability. BMI at average age was lower in townships versus boroughs (beta [SE]) (0.217 [0.027], P < 0.001) and cities (0.378 [0.036], P < 0.001), as was BMI growth over time. Factor distributions across community types lacked overlap, requiring stratified analyses to avoid extrapolation. In townships, FOOD, UTIL, and FIT were inversely associated with BMI trajectories. Across community types, youth in the lowest (versus higher) CSED quartiles had lower BMI at average age and slower BMI growth, signifying the importance of community deprivation to the obesogenicity of environments. Keywords: Built environment, Pediatric obesity, Electronic health records, Rural populations, Social environmenthttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335519301135
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Melissa N. Poulsen
Thomas A. Glass
Jonathan Pollak
Karen Bandeen-Roche
Annemarie G. Hirsch
Lisa Bailey-Davis
Brian S. Schwartz
spellingShingle Melissa N. Poulsen
Thomas A. Glass
Jonathan Pollak
Karen Bandeen-Roche
Annemarie G. Hirsch
Lisa Bailey-Davis
Brian S. Schwartz
Associations of multidimensional socioeconomic and built environment factors with body mass index trajectories among youth in geographically heterogeneous communities
Preventive Medicine Reports
author_facet Melissa N. Poulsen
Thomas A. Glass
Jonathan Pollak
Karen Bandeen-Roche
Annemarie G. Hirsch
Lisa Bailey-Davis
Brian S. Schwartz
author_sort Melissa N. Poulsen
title Associations of multidimensional socioeconomic and built environment factors with body mass index trajectories among youth in geographically heterogeneous communities
title_short Associations of multidimensional socioeconomic and built environment factors with body mass index trajectories among youth in geographically heterogeneous communities
title_full Associations of multidimensional socioeconomic and built environment factors with body mass index trajectories among youth in geographically heterogeneous communities
title_fullStr Associations of multidimensional socioeconomic and built environment factors with body mass index trajectories among youth in geographically heterogeneous communities
title_full_unstemmed Associations of multidimensional socioeconomic and built environment factors with body mass index trajectories among youth in geographically heterogeneous communities
title_sort associations of multidimensional socioeconomic and built environment factors with body mass index trajectories among youth in geographically heterogeneous communities
publisher Elsevier
series Preventive Medicine Reports
issn 2211-3355
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Understanding contextual influences on obesity requires comparison of heterogeneous communities and concurrent assessment of multiple contextual domains. We used a theoretically-based measurement model to assess multidimensional socioeconomic and built environment factors theorized to influence childhood obesity across a diverse geography ranging from rural to urban. Confirmatory factor analysis specified four factors—community socioeconomic deprivation (CSED), food outlet abundance (FOOD), fitness and recreational assets (FIT), and utilitarian physical activity favorability (UTIL)—which were assigned to communities (townships, boroughs, city census tracts) in 37 Pennsylvania counties. Using electronic health records from 2001 to 2012 from 163,820 youth aged 3–18 years from 1288 communities, we conducted multilevel linear regression analyses with factor quartiles and their cross products with age, age2, and age3 to test whether community factors impacted body mass index (BMI) growth trajectories. Models controlled for sex, age, race/ethnicity, and Medical Assistance. Factor scores were lowest in townships, indicating less deprivation, fewer food and physical activity outlets, and lower utilitarian physical activity favorability. BMI at average age was lower in townships versus boroughs (beta [SE]) (0.217 [0.027], P < 0.001) and cities (0.378 [0.036], P < 0.001), as was BMI growth over time. Factor distributions across community types lacked overlap, requiring stratified analyses to avoid extrapolation. In townships, FOOD, UTIL, and FIT were inversely associated with BMI trajectories. Across community types, youth in the lowest (versus higher) CSED quartiles had lower BMI at average age and slower BMI growth, signifying the importance of community deprivation to the obesogenicity of environments. Keywords: Built environment, Pediatric obesity, Electronic health records, Rural populations, Social environment
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335519301135
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