Examining the state,quality and strength of the evidence in the research on built environments and physical activity among children and youth: An overview of reviews from high income countries |
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Affiliation: | 1. Centre for Surveillance and Applied Research, Public Health Agency of Canada, Ottawa, Canada;2. School of Epidemiology and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada;3. School of Mathematics and Statistics, Faculty of Science, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada;4. Health Library, Health Canada, Ottawa, Canada |
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Abstract: | BackgroundBuilt environments have shown to be associated with health, with physical activity (PA) considered one of the critical pathways for achieving benefits. Navigating available evidence on the built environment and PA is challenging given the number of reviews.ObjectiveExamine the current state and quality of research looking at associations between built environments and total PA and domains of PA (i.e., leisure/recreation, transportation, school) among children and youth (1–18 years).MethodsWe systematically searched the grey literature and six bibliographic databases from January 2000 to May 2020. Review quality was assessed using the AMSTAR2. Results by age group were synthesized using narrative syntheses and harvest plots, and certainty of the evidence was assessed using a modified GRADE approach.ResultsThis overview included 65 reviews. Most reviews were of very low-to-low quality. High certainty was found for positive associations between transportation PA and walking/cycling/active transportation (AT) infrastructure. There was high certainty for positive associations between streets/play streets and total PA, alongside lower certainty for transportation and leisure PA. Very low-to-moderate certainty supports schoolyards designed to promote PA were positively associated with total PA, but mixed for school PA (except children). Less consistent positive associations were found for forests/trees, greenspace/open space, recreation facilities, street lighting, traffic safety, population/residential density, proximity/access to destinations, neighbourhood characteristics, and home environments. There is very low-to-moderate certainty for negative associations between greater distance to school and traffic volume and domains of PA. Generally, null or mixed associations were observed for aesthetics, parks, AT comfort infrastructure, land-use mix, street connectivity, urban/rural status, and public transit.DiscussionThere remains a need for high quality systematic reviews and studies to evaluate the effects of environmental changes across the pediatric age spectrum and using a PA domain approach. Given the global physical inactivity crisis the built environment remains and important means to promote PA among children/youth. |
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Keywords: | Built environment Physical activity Recreation Active transport Children Youth Review |
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