Grant Details
Grant Number: |
3R01CA197761-04S2 Interpret this number |
Primary Investigator: |
Ory, Marcia |
Organization: |
Texas A&M University Health Science Ctr |
Project Title: |
Physical Activity Impacts of a Planned Activity-Friendly Community: the What, Where, When and Why of Environmental Approaches to Obesity Prevention |
Fiscal Year: |
2018 |
Abstract
Summary/Abstract and Specific Aims of the Funded Parent Grant/Project
Physical activity (PA) helps prevent obesity and reduce the risk of cancer as well as other chronic
conditions such as diabetes and heart disease. PA can be promoted through environmental/policy
interventions at the population level. However, existing empirical knowledge on environment-PA
relationships is primarily based on cross-sectional studies, which provide insufficient control of
extraneous factors for investigating causal relationships. Further, little is known about how environmental
factors affect spatial (where) and temporal (when) patterns of PA and the underlying mechanisms (why)
of such impacts, including potential mediating effects of the psychosocial factors. The objective of the
Physical Activity Impacts of a Planned Activity study is to examine both short-term and long-term
changes in PA after residents move to the Mueller community, which is an activity-friendly community
(AFC). For this study, AFC’s are defined as man-made surroundings that provide a setting for human
activity including parks and greens spaces within the residential area. It utilizes a unique and fleeting
opportunity with ~3000 new homes being built in a large planned AFC over the next ~3 years. The focus
is on those who are currently sedentary or insufficiently active and living in an environment lacking
support for PA. Case participants (n~350) are adults moving from non-AFCs to this AFC and not meeting
the CDC guidelines for PA at pre-move baseline. Each case participant will be matched based on gender
and age (±5 years) with a comparison participant who lives in his/her pre-move non-AFC, is also
sedentary or insufficiently active, and is not planning to move for at least two years (the project's follow-
up measurement period). The specific aims of this proposed study are to 1) examine the short-term and
long-term changes in total PA levels (weekly minutes) and in spatial and temporal patterns of PA
(proportion of PA taking place within the community, proportion of walking out of total PA, and level of
PA integration into daily routines) after sedentary or insufficiently active individuals move from non-
AFCs to an AFC; and 2) determine what built and natural environmental factors (e.g., density, land uses,
sidewalks, trails/paths, parks, water features) lead to changes in PA among these populations, either
directly or indirectly by affecting psychosocial factors related to PA. Using this timely opportunity to gain
longitudinal assessments for this natural experiment is of critical importance to advancing the status of
knowledge on the intersection of health and place as it relates to promoting PA. The multidisciplinary
research team has extensive experience related to this topic and with this study community through pilot
work. At this study’s conclusion, we will have identified stronger evidence supporting the impact of an
AFC on population-level behavior changes toward more physically active lifestyles (short-term goal) and
toward lessening the burden of obesity throughout the nation (long-term goal).
Publications
None. See parent grant details.