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Physically constructed and socially shaped: socio-material environment and walking for transportation in later life

Physically constructed and socially shaped: socio-material environment and walking for transportation in later life
Physically constructed and socially shaped: socio-material environment and walking for transportation in later life
The predictive power of three intersecting environmental dimensions on late-life walking was investigated: built structures, social infrastructure, and social capital, conceptually based on the ecological framework of place within a life course perspective, which posits that a living environment is simultaneously a physical place, a social place, and a set of social bonds. Multilevel models were used to examine the extent to which environments defined as interactions of the social and material environmental dimensions reliably predict walking for transportation among U.S. adults aged 60 or older in the 2015 National Health Interview Survey (n=11,180). Random intercepts representing 221 environments showed an intraclass correlation of 21%, indicating high levels of between-environment variance in walking. Social infrastructure had the highest predictive power for walking, followed by material structures and social capital. Synergistic interventions that incorporate the intersecting nature of the socio-material environment may be most effective in promoting physical activity in later life.
LIVES - Swiss Centre of Expertise in Research
Li, Yang
4789a098-30e5-4197-8082-e467601b7a52
Li, Yang
4789a098-30e5-4197-8082-e467601b7a52

Li, Yang (2022) Physically constructed and socially shaped: socio-material environment and walking for transportation in later life Lausanne, Switzerland. LIVES - Swiss Centre of Expertise in Research 23pp. (doi:10.12682/lives.2296-1658.2022.96).

Record type: Monograph (Working Paper)

Abstract

The predictive power of three intersecting environmental dimensions on late-life walking was investigated: built structures, social infrastructure, and social capital, conceptually based on the ecological framework of place within a life course perspective, which posits that a living environment is simultaneously a physical place, a social place, and a set of social bonds. Multilevel models were used to examine the extent to which environments defined as interactions of the social and material environmental dimensions reliably predict walking for transportation among U.S. adults aged 60 or older in the 2015 National Health Interview Survey (n=11,180). Random intercepts representing 221 environments showed an intraclass correlation of 21%, indicating high levels of between-environment variance in walking. Social infrastructure had the highest predictive power for walking, followed by material structures and social capital. Synergistic interventions that incorporate the intersecting nature of the socio-material environment may be most effective in promoting physical activity in later life.

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Published date: 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 471763
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471763
PURE UUID: 3ba8dcd6-8f58-42c3-87c9-4a669c952e68
ORCID for Yang Li: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1051-4788

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Date deposited: 17 Nov 2022 17:48
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 22:50

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Author: Yang Li ORCID iD

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