Does active commuting protect against obesity in mid-life? Cross-sectional, observational evidence from UK Biobank
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文摘
The health benefits of physical activity are well understood. However, recent decades have seen declines in typical physical activity levels across populations in high and middle income countries. Active commuting has been promoted as a way to counteract the negative population health consequences of sedentary lifestyles. This study assessed the association between active commuting and obesity in mid-life with the use of objectively measured anthropometric data.

Methods

Baseline cross-sectional data (2006–10) from UK Biobank were used (502 664 participants aged 40–69 years, of whom 264 341 commuted). Self-reported commuting mode was operationalised across seven mode categories, ordered to indicate typical physical activity. Outcomes were objectively measured body-mass index (BMI) and percentage body fat (BF%). Hypothesised confounders were identified: commute frequency, income, area deprivation, urban or rural commute, education, alcohol use, smoking, leisure physical activity, occupational physical activity, general health, and limiting illness or disability. Interaction effects were found for sex, so sex-stratified, nested, multivariate linear regression models were estimated. Final complete case sample sizes were 71 353 men, 82 365 women (for BMI analysis); and 70 627 men, 81 504 women (BF%).

Findings

Active commuting was significantly and independently predictive of lower BMI and BF% for both men and women, with a dose-response pattern apparent across the seven mode categories. In the fully adjusted models, mixed active and public transport commuters had significantly lower BMI than did car-driving commuters (men −1·0 kg/m2, 95% CI −1·13 to −0·84; women −0·7, −0·85 to −0·48). Cycling predicted lower BMI (men −1·72 kg/m2, 95% CI −1·87 to −1·57; women −1·66, −1·91 to −1·42). A similar pattern and magnitude of effect was observed for BF%. Mixed active and public transport commuters had significantly lower BF% than did car users (men −1·3%, 95% CI −1·50 to −1·10; women −1·09, −1·38 to −0·80). Walking predicted lower BF% (men −1·2%, 95% CI −1·54 to −0·91; women −1·2, −1·34 to −0·98), and cyclists had significantly lower BF% (men −2·3%, 95% CI −3·03 to −2·47; women −3·3, −3·81 to −2·73). Sensitivity analyses to investigate the effects of item missingness, interactions, distance and frequency, and effects of energy intake did not affect the results.

Interpretation

This study is the first to our knowledge to use UK Biobank data to address the topic of active commuting and obesity; we found robust, independent associations between active commuting and healthier body weight and composition. This research supports the promotion of active commuting as a population-level policy response. Further research should make use of longitudinal data to provide stronger causal inference.

Funding

Medical Research Council Strategic Skills Postdoctoral Fellowship in Population Health (awarded to EF)

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