Community Environments That Promote Intergenerational Interactions vs. Walking Among Older Adults

Background: Intergenerational interactions and walking are two of the most beneficial forms of activities for older adults. As older adults spend most of their time at or near home, the characteristics of the proximate residential environments are particularly important for supporting those activiti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sinan Zhong, Chanam Lee, Hanwool Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2020.587363/full
id doaj-37f16b3a725641b8aae57c1e47a5b896
record_format Article
spelling doaj-37f16b3a725641b8aae57c1e47a5b8962020-12-08T08:35:24ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Public Health2296-25652020-12-01810.3389/fpubh.2020.587363587363Community Environments That Promote Intergenerational Interactions vs. Walking Among Older AdultsSinan ZhongChanam LeeHanwool LeeBackground: Intergenerational interactions and walking are two of the most beneficial forms of activities for older adults. As older adults spend most of their time at or near home, the characteristics of the proximate residential environments are particularly important for supporting those activities. This study aims to (1) explore places used for various social interactions older adults engage in, (2) examine specific neighborhood environmental features associated with intergenerational interactions, and (3) compare similarities and differences in environmental correlates of intergenerational interactions vs. walking.Methods: This cross-sectional study analyzed self-reported survey data from 455 community-dwelling adults aged 65+ from Austin, Texas, as well as Geographic Information System (GIS) measures capturing the neighborhood environment around each participant's home. Descriptive statistics were used for Aim 1. Multivariable binary logistic models were used for Aims 2 and 3, to identify environmental variables predicting the odds of participating in intergenerational interactions (with children 1+ times/week, and with children, teenagers, or adults 1+ times/week) in one's neighborhood, as well as walking 1+ times/week for transportation or recreation purposes.Results: Participants had a mean age of 73 years, and were primarily female (72.1%) and non-Hispanic white (72.8%). Older adults interacted frequently with adults (79.2%, 1+ times/week) and other older adults (66.9%) in their neighborhood, while less frequently with children (28.0%) and teenagers (21.9%). Recreational walking (73.3%, 1+ times/week) was more popular for older adults than transportation walking (43.8%). Multivariable analyses showed that neighborhood perceptions, transportation infrastructure, land uses, land covers, population densities, development activities, and composite scores were significant predictors of intergenerational activities. Both similarities and differences were found in terms of the neighborhood environmental factors associated with intergenerational interactions vs. walking although differences were more evident in the domains of land covers, development activities, and composite scores.Conclusions: Given the significant health benefits, promoting intergenerational interactions and walking among older adults should be a national/global responsibility. Further work is needed to improve our understanding of the specific social and physical environmental facilitators as well as barriers to creating intergenerational communities that can support healthy living of all generations.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2020.587363/fullintergenerational communitiesinteractions with childrenintergenerational interactionstransportation walkingrecreational walkingolder adults
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sinan Zhong
Chanam Lee
Hanwool Lee
spellingShingle Sinan Zhong
Chanam Lee
Hanwool Lee
Community Environments That Promote Intergenerational Interactions vs. Walking Among Older Adults
Frontiers in Public Health
intergenerational communities
interactions with children
intergenerational interactions
transportation walking
recreational walking
older adults
author_facet Sinan Zhong
Chanam Lee
Hanwool Lee
author_sort Sinan Zhong
title Community Environments That Promote Intergenerational Interactions vs. Walking Among Older Adults
title_short Community Environments That Promote Intergenerational Interactions vs. Walking Among Older Adults
title_full Community Environments That Promote Intergenerational Interactions vs. Walking Among Older Adults
title_fullStr Community Environments That Promote Intergenerational Interactions vs. Walking Among Older Adults
title_full_unstemmed Community Environments That Promote Intergenerational Interactions vs. Walking Among Older Adults
title_sort community environments that promote intergenerational interactions vs. walking among older adults
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Public Health
issn 2296-2565
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Background: Intergenerational interactions and walking are two of the most beneficial forms of activities for older adults. As older adults spend most of their time at or near home, the characteristics of the proximate residential environments are particularly important for supporting those activities. This study aims to (1) explore places used for various social interactions older adults engage in, (2) examine specific neighborhood environmental features associated with intergenerational interactions, and (3) compare similarities and differences in environmental correlates of intergenerational interactions vs. walking.Methods: This cross-sectional study analyzed self-reported survey data from 455 community-dwelling adults aged 65+ from Austin, Texas, as well as Geographic Information System (GIS) measures capturing the neighborhood environment around each participant's home. Descriptive statistics were used for Aim 1. Multivariable binary logistic models were used for Aims 2 and 3, to identify environmental variables predicting the odds of participating in intergenerational interactions (with children 1+ times/week, and with children, teenagers, or adults 1+ times/week) in one's neighborhood, as well as walking 1+ times/week for transportation or recreation purposes.Results: Participants had a mean age of 73 years, and were primarily female (72.1%) and non-Hispanic white (72.8%). Older adults interacted frequently with adults (79.2%, 1+ times/week) and other older adults (66.9%) in their neighborhood, while less frequently with children (28.0%) and teenagers (21.9%). Recreational walking (73.3%, 1+ times/week) was more popular for older adults than transportation walking (43.8%). Multivariable analyses showed that neighborhood perceptions, transportation infrastructure, land uses, land covers, population densities, development activities, and composite scores were significant predictors of intergenerational activities. Both similarities and differences were found in terms of the neighborhood environmental factors associated with intergenerational interactions vs. walking although differences were more evident in the domains of land covers, development activities, and composite scores.Conclusions: Given the significant health benefits, promoting intergenerational interactions and walking among older adults should be a national/global responsibility. Further work is needed to improve our understanding of the specific social and physical environmental facilitators as well as barriers to creating intergenerational communities that can support healthy living of all generations.
topic intergenerational communities
interactions with children
intergenerational interactions
transportation walking
recreational walking
older adults
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2020.587363/full
work_keys_str_mv AT sinanzhong communityenvironmentsthatpromoteintergenerationalinteractionsvswalkingamongolderadults
AT chanamlee communityenvironmentsthatpromoteintergenerationalinteractionsvswalkingamongolderadults
AT hanwoollee communityenvironmentsthatpromoteintergenerationalinteractionsvswalkingamongolderadults
_version_ 1724390822545195008