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Citation

Gordon-Larsen, Penny; Nelson, Melissa C.; & Beam, Kristin (2005). Associations among Active Transportation, Physical Activity, and Weight Status in Young Adults. Obesity Research, 13(5), 868-875.

Abstract

Objective: To describe prevalence of active, public, and car transit by overweight status and amount of leisure-time physical activity in a nationally representative cohort of ethnically diverse young adults.
Research Methods and Procedures: Questionnaire data on patterns of transportation were collected from U.S. adolescents enrolled in Wave III (2001) of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (N = 10,771). Measured height and weight data were used to calculate BMI and classify adults by overweight status (BMI ? 25). Self-reported physical activity data were used to classify adults into those who achieved ? 5 bouts of weekly moderate-vigorous physical activity and those who did not. Results were stratified by overweight and physical activity status.
Results: The vast majority of young adults used car transit (work, 90.4%; school, 74.7%). A small proportion of young adults used active means of transportation to work (8.1%) and school (26.7%), and fewer used public transportation to work or school (<10%). The proportion of individuals using active transportation was higher among the nonoverweight traveling to work (9.2%) and school (29.7%) and among the more active traveling to work (15.2%) and school (37.0%) relative to the overweight and less active young adults.
Discussion: The vast majority of young adults of all racial/ethnic backgrounds, particularly blacks and Hispanics, did not use active transportation to school and/or work. Active transportation was more common among nonoverweight and more active young adults, of high socioeconomic status, particularly full-time students. Population-level efforts (and environmental supports) to increase non-leisure physical activity, particularly active transportation, are sorely needed as a means of supporting and promoting overall physical activity.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/oby.2005.100

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2005

Journal Title

Obesity Research

Author(s)

Gordon-Larsen, Penny
Nelson, Melissa C.
Beam, Kristin

ORCiD

Gordon-Larsen - 0000-0001-5322-4188