You are here: Home / Publications / Differential Associations of Urbanicity and Income with Physical Activity in Adults in Urbanizing China: Findings from the Population-Based China Health and Nutrition Survey 1991-2009

Differential Associations of Urbanicity and Income with Physical Activity in Adults in Urbanizing China: Findings from the Population-Based China Health and Nutrition Survey 1991-2009

Attard, Samantha M.; Howard, Annie Green; Herring, Amy H.; Zhang, Bing; Du, Shufa; Aiello, Allison E.; Popkin, Barry M.; & Gordon-Larsen, Penny. (2015). Differential Associations of Urbanicity and Income with Physical Activity in Adults in Urbanizing China: Findings from the Population-Based China Health and Nutrition Survey 1991-2009. International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity, 12(1), 152. PMCID: PMC4676871

Attard, Samantha M.; Howard, Annie Green; Herring, Amy H.; Zhang, Bing; Du, Shufa; Aiello, Allison E.; Popkin, Barry M.; & Gordon-Larsen, Penny. (2015). Differential Associations of Urbanicity and Income with Physical Activity in Adults in Urbanizing China: Findings from the Population-Based China Health and Nutrition Survey 1991-2009. International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity, 12(1), 152. PMCID: PMC4676871

Octet Stream icon 2390.ris — Octet Stream, 2 kB (2,607 bytes)

BACKGROUND:High urbanicity and income are risk factors for cardiovascular-related chronic diseases in low- and middle-income countries, perhaps due to low physical activity (PA) in urban, high income areas. Few studies have examined differences in PA over time according to income and urbanicity in a country experiencing rapid urbanization.METHODS:We used data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey, a population-based cohort of Chinese adults (n=20,083; ages 18-75y) seen a maximum of 7 times from 1991-2009. We used sex-stratified, zero-inflated negative binomial regression models to examine occupational, domestic, leisure, travel, and total PA in Chinese adults according to year, urbanicity, income, and the interactions among urbanicity, income, and year, controlling for age and region of China.RESULTS:We showed larger mean temporal PA declines for individuals living in relatively low urbanicity areas (1991: 500 MET-hours/week; 2009: 300 MET-hours/week) compared to high urbanicity areas (1991: 200 MET-hours/week; 2009: 125 MET-hours/week). In low urbanicity areas, the association between income and total PA went from negative in 1991 (p<0.05) to positive by 2000 (p<0.05). In relatively high urbanicity areas, the income-PA relationship was positive at all time points and was statistically significant at most time points after 1997 (p<0.05). Leisure PA was the only domain of PA that increased over time, but >95% of individuals in low urbanicity areas reported zero leisure PA at each time point.CONCLUSIONS:Our findings show changing associations for income and urbanicity with PA over 18years of urbanization. Total PA was lower for individuals living in more versus less urban areas at all time points. However, these differences narrowed over time, which may relate to increases in individual-level income in less urban areas of China with urbanization. Low-income individuals in higher urbanicity areas are a particularly critical group to target to increase PA in China.




JOUR



Attard, Samantha M.
Howard, Annie Green
Herring, Amy H.
Zhang, Bing
Du, Shufa
Aiello, Allison E.
Popkin, Barry M.
Gordon-Larsen, Penny



2015


International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity

12

1

152








PMC4676871


2390