The Urban Built Environment, Walking and Mental Health Outcomes Among Older Adults: A Pilot Study

The benefits of walking in older age include improved cognitive health (e.g., mental alertness, improved memory functioning) and a reduced risk of stress, depression and dementia. However, research capturing the benefits of walking among older people in real-time as they navigate their world is curr...

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Main Authors: Jenny Roe, Andrew Mondschein, Chris Neale, Laura Barnes, Medhi Boukhechba, Stephanie Lopez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-09-01
Series:Frontiers in Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpubh.2020.575946/full
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spelling doaj-c183b7ef41af4aafa13c7ac3fbd14d742020-11-25T03:40:09ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Public Health2296-25652020-09-01810.3389/fpubh.2020.575946575946The Urban Built Environment, Walking and Mental Health Outcomes Among Older Adults: A Pilot StudyJenny Roe0Andrew Mondschein1Chris Neale2Laura Barnes3Medhi Boukhechba4Stephanie Lopez5Center for Design & Health, School of Architecture, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United StatesDepartment of Urban and Environmental Planning, School of Architecture, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United StatesCenter for Design & Health, School of Architecture, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United StatesEngineering Systems and Environment Department, School of Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United StatesEngineering Systems and Environment Department, School of Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United StatesDepartment of Urban and Environmental Planning, School of Architecture, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United StatesThe benefits of walking in older age include improved cognitive health (e.g., mental alertness, improved memory functioning) and a reduced risk of stress, depression and dementia. However, research capturing the benefits of walking among older people in real-time as they navigate their world is currently very limited. This study explores cognitive health and well-being outcomes in older people as they walk in their local neighborhood environment. Residents from an independent living facility for older people (mean age 65, n = 11) walked from their home in two dichotomous settings, selected on the basis of significantly different infrastructure, varying levels of noise, traffic and percentage of green space. Employing a repeated-measures, cross over design, participants were randomly allocated to one of two groups, and walked on different days in an urban busy “gray” district (a busy, built up commercial street) vs. an urban quiet “green” district (a quiet residential area with front gardens and street trees). Our study captured real-time air quality and noise data using hand-held Airbeam sensors and physiologic health data using a smart watch to capture heart rate variability (a biomarker of stress). Cognitive health outcome measures were a pre- and post-walk short cognitive reaction time (SRT) test and memory recall of the route walked (captured via a drawn mental map). Emotional well-being outcomes were a pre- and post-walk mood scale capturing perceived stress, happiness and arousal levels. Findings showed significant positive health benefits from walking in the urban green district on emotional well-being (happiness levels) and stress physiology (p < 0.05), accompanied by faster cognitive reaction times post-walk, albeit not statistically significant in this small sample. Cognitive recall of the route varied between urban gray and urban green conditions, as participants were more likely to rely on natural features to define their routes when present. The environmental and physiologic data sets were converged to show a significant effect of ambient noise and urban conditions on stress activation as measured by heart rate variability. Findings are discussed in relation to the complexity of combining real-time environmental and physiologic data and the implications for follow-on studies. Overall, our study demonstrates the viability of using older people as citizen scientists in the capture of environmental and physiologic stress data and establishes a new protocol for exploring relationships between the built environment and cognitive health in older people.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpubh.2020.575946/fullcognitive healthstressair pollutionnoise pollutionurban green spacewearable sensors
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jenny Roe
Andrew Mondschein
Chris Neale
Laura Barnes
Medhi Boukhechba
Stephanie Lopez
spellingShingle Jenny Roe
Andrew Mondschein
Chris Neale
Laura Barnes
Medhi Boukhechba
Stephanie Lopez
The Urban Built Environment, Walking and Mental Health Outcomes Among Older Adults: A Pilot Study
Frontiers in Public Health
cognitive health
stress
air pollution
noise pollution
urban green space
wearable sensors
author_facet Jenny Roe
Andrew Mondschein
Chris Neale
Laura Barnes
Medhi Boukhechba
Stephanie Lopez
author_sort Jenny Roe
title The Urban Built Environment, Walking and Mental Health Outcomes Among Older Adults: A Pilot Study
title_short The Urban Built Environment, Walking and Mental Health Outcomes Among Older Adults: A Pilot Study
title_full The Urban Built Environment, Walking and Mental Health Outcomes Among Older Adults: A Pilot Study
title_fullStr The Urban Built Environment, Walking and Mental Health Outcomes Among Older Adults: A Pilot Study
title_full_unstemmed The Urban Built Environment, Walking and Mental Health Outcomes Among Older Adults: A Pilot Study
title_sort urban built environment, walking and mental health outcomes among older adults: a pilot study
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Public Health
issn 2296-2565
publishDate 2020-09-01
description The benefits of walking in older age include improved cognitive health (e.g., mental alertness, improved memory functioning) and a reduced risk of stress, depression and dementia. However, research capturing the benefits of walking among older people in real-time as they navigate their world is currently very limited. This study explores cognitive health and well-being outcomes in older people as they walk in their local neighborhood environment. Residents from an independent living facility for older people (mean age 65, n = 11) walked from their home in two dichotomous settings, selected on the basis of significantly different infrastructure, varying levels of noise, traffic and percentage of green space. Employing a repeated-measures, cross over design, participants were randomly allocated to one of two groups, and walked on different days in an urban busy “gray” district (a busy, built up commercial street) vs. an urban quiet “green” district (a quiet residential area with front gardens and street trees). Our study captured real-time air quality and noise data using hand-held Airbeam sensors and physiologic health data using a smart watch to capture heart rate variability (a biomarker of stress). Cognitive health outcome measures were a pre- and post-walk short cognitive reaction time (SRT) test and memory recall of the route walked (captured via a drawn mental map). Emotional well-being outcomes were a pre- and post-walk mood scale capturing perceived stress, happiness and arousal levels. Findings showed significant positive health benefits from walking in the urban green district on emotional well-being (happiness levels) and stress physiology (p < 0.05), accompanied by faster cognitive reaction times post-walk, albeit not statistically significant in this small sample. Cognitive recall of the route varied between urban gray and urban green conditions, as participants were more likely to rely on natural features to define their routes when present. The environmental and physiologic data sets were converged to show a significant effect of ambient noise and urban conditions on stress activation as measured by heart rate variability. Findings are discussed in relation to the complexity of combining real-time environmental and physiologic data and the implications for follow-on studies. Overall, our study demonstrates the viability of using older people as citizen scientists in the capture of environmental and physiologic stress data and establishes a new protocol for exploring relationships between the built environment and cognitive health in older people.
topic cognitive health
stress
air pollution
noise pollution
urban green space
wearable sensors
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpubh.2020.575946/full
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