TY - JOUR
T1 - Body mass index and the built and social environments in children and adolescents using electronic health records
AU - Schwartz, Brian S.
AU - Stewart, Walter F.
AU - Godby, Sarah
AU - Pollak, Jonathan
AU - Dewalle, Joseph
AU - Larson, Sharon
AU - Mercer, Dione G.
AU - Glass, Thomas A.
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was funded, in part, by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Active Living Research Program , Round 8, Grant ID Number 65544 .
PY - 2011/10
Y1 - 2011/10
N2 - Background: No prior studies in children have evaluated how age may modify relationships of the built and social environments with BMI, nor evaluated the range of scales and contexts over which places may influence health. Purpose: To systematically evaluate associations of 33 environmental measures in three domains (land use, physical activity, and social environments) with BMI in children and adolescents in five geographies. Methods: A cross-sectional, multilevel analysis was completed in 20092010 of electronic health record data (20012008) from 47,769 children aged 518 years residing in a 31-county region of Pennsylvania. Associations of environmental measures with BMI were evaluated using 0.5-mile network buffers; census tracts; minor civil divisions (i.e., townships, boroughs, cities); a mixed definition of place (townships, boroughs, and census tracts in cities); and counties, overall and by age strata. Results: Among all children, lower levels of community socioeconomic deprivation and greater diversity of physical activity establishments were associated with lower BMI. Associations of environmental measures differed by age, depending on scale and context. For example, higher population density was associated with lower BMI in older children; this effect was strongest in the larger geographies. Similarly, a lower level of county sprawl was associated with lower BMI in older children. Conclusions: Associations differed by age and definition of place, suggesting that the benefits of environmental intervention may not be uniform across the childhood age range. The study demonstrated the utility of using electronic patient information for large-scale, population-based epidemiologic research, a research area of growing interest and investment in the U.S.
AB - Background: No prior studies in children have evaluated how age may modify relationships of the built and social environments with BMI, nor evaluated the range of scales and contexts over which places may influence health. Purpose: To systematically evaluate associations of 33 environmental measures in three domains (land use, physical activity, and social environments) with BMI in children and adolescents in five geographies. Methods: A cross-sectional, multilevel analysis was completed in 20092010 of electronic health record data (20012008) from 47,769 children aged 518 years residing in a 31-county region of Pennsylvania. Associations of environmental measures with BMI were evaluated using 0.5-mile network buffers; census tracts; minor civil divisions (i.e., townships, boroughs, cities); a mixed definition of place (townships, boroughs, and census tracts in cities); and counties, overall and by age strata. Results: Among all children, lower levels of community socioeconomic deprivation and greater diversity of physical activity establishments were associated with lower BMI. Associations of environmental measures differed by age, depending on scale and context. For example, higher population density was associated with lower BMI in older children; this effect was strongest in the larger geographies. Similarly, a lower level of county sprawl was associated with lower BMI in older children. Conclusions: Associations differed by age and definition of place, suggesting that the benefits of environmental intervention may not be uniform across the childhood age range. The study demonstrated the utility of using electronic patient information for large-scale, population-based epidemiologic research, a research area of growing interest and investment in the U.S.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.amepre.2011.06.038
DO - 10.1016/j.amepre.2011.06.038
M3 - Article
C2 - 21961475
AN - SCOPUS:80053366077
SN - 0749-3797
VL - 41
SP - e17-e28
JO - American Journal of Preventive Medicine
JF - American Journal of Preventive Medicine
IS - 4
ER -