Is public transport a promising strategy for increasing physical activity? Evidence from a study of objectively measured public transport use and physical activity.

IF 5.6 1区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity Pub Date : 2024-08-19 DOI:10.1186/s12966-024-01633-3
Jack T Evans, Oliver Stanesby, Leigh Blizzard, Stephen Greaves, Anna Timperio, Kim Jose, Melanie J Sharman, Andrew J Palmer, Verity J Cleland
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Abstract

Background: Greater public transport use has been linked to higher physical activity levels. However, neither the amount of physical activity associated with each daily public transport trip performed, nor the potential total physical activity gain associated with an increase in trips/day, has been determined. Using objective measures, we aimed to quantify the association between public transport use, physical activity and sedentary time.

Methods: A longitudinal study of Australian adults living in Hobart, Tasmania, who were infrequent bus users (≥ 18 years; used bus ≤ 2 times/week). The number of bus trips performed each day was determined from objective smartcard data provided by the public transportation (bus) provider across a 36-week study timeframe. Accelerometer measured steps/day (primary outcome), moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (min/day), and sedentary time (min/day) were assessed across four separate one-week periods.

Results: Among 73 participants across 1483 day-level observations, on days that public transport was used, participants achieved significantly more steps (β = 2147.48; 95%CI = 1465.94, 2829.03), moderate to vigorous physical activity (β = 22.79; 95% CI = 14.33, 31.26), and sedentary time (β = 37.00; 95% CI = 19.80, 54.21) compared to days where no public transport trips were made. The largest increase in steps per day associated with a one-trip increase was observed when the number of trips performed each day increased from zero to one (β = 1761.63; 95%CI = 821.38, 2701.87). The increase in the number of steps per day was smaller and non-significant when the number of trips performed increased from one to two (β = 596.93; 95%CI=-585.16, 1779.01), and two to three or more (β = 632.39; 95%CI=-1331.45, 2596.24) trips per day. Significant increases in sedentary time were observed when the number of trips performed increased from zero to one (β = 39.38; 95%CI = 14.38, 64.39) and one to two (β = 48.76; 95%CI = 25.39, 72.12); but not when bus trips increased from two to three or more (β=-27.81; 95%CI=-76.00, 20.37).

Conclusions: Greater public transport use was associated with higher physical activity and sedentary behaviour. Bus use may yield cumulative increases in steps that amount to 15-30% of the daily recommended physical activity target. A policy and public health focus on intersectoral action to promote public transport may yield meaningful increases in physical activity and subsequent health benefits.

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公共交通是增加体育锻炼的有效策略吗?一项客观测量公共交通使用和体育活动的研究提供的证据。
背景:更多使用公共交通与更高的体力活动水平有关。然而,与每天乘坐公共交通工具出行相关的体力活动量,以及与每天出行次数增加相关的潜在体力活动总收益都尚未确定。我们采用客观测量方法,旨在量化公共交通使用、体力活动和久坐时间之间的关联:对居住在塔斯马尼亚州霍巴特的澳大利亚成年人进行纵向研究,这些人不经常乘坐公交车(≥ 18 岁;每周乘坐公交车次数少于 2 次)。每天乘坐公交车的次数是根据公共交通(公交车)提供商提供的客观智能卡数据确定的,研究时间跨度为 36 周。对加速度计测量的步数/天(主要结果)、中强度体力活动(分钟/天)和久坐时间(分钟/天)进行了四个独立的为期一周的评估:在 73 名参与者的 1483 次日级观察中,与未使用公共交通的日子相比,在使用公共交通的日子里,参与者的步数(β = 2147.48;95%CI = 1465.94,2829.03)、中度至剧烈运动(β = 22.79;95%CI = 14.33,31.26)和久坐时间(β = 37.00;95%CI = 19.80,54.21)显著增加。当每天的出行次数从 0 次增加到 1 次时,与出行次数增加 1 次相关的每天步数增幅最大(β = 1761.63; 95%CI = 821.38, 2701.87)。当每天出行次数从一次增加到两次(β=596.93;95%CI=-585.16,1779.01),以及从两次增加到三次或三次以上(β=632.39;95%CI=-1331.45,2596.24)时,每天行走步数的增加较小,且不显著。当乘车次数从零次增加到一次(β=39.38;95%CI=14.38,64.39)和一次增加到两次(β=48.76;95%CI=25.39,72.12)时,久坐时间显著增加;但当乘车次数从两次增加到三次或三次以上时,久坐时间没有显著增加(β=-27.81;95%CI=-76.00,20.37):更多使用公共交通与更高的体力活动和久坐行为有关。公交车的使用可能会累积增加步数,达到每日推荐体力活动目标的 15-30%。将政策和公共卫生的重点放在促进公共交通的跨部门行动上,可能会有意义地增加体力活动,从而为健康带来益处。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.80
自引率
3.40%
发文量
138
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity (IJBNPA) is an open access, peer-reviewed journal offering high quality articles, rapid publication and wide diffusion in the public domain. IJBNPA is devoted to furthering the understanding of the behavioral aspects of diet and physical activity and is unique in its inclusion of multiple levels of analysis, including populations, groups and individuals and its inclusion of epidemiology, and behavioral, theoretical and measurement research areas.
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