0 511

Cited 0 times in

Correlates of physical activity in urban midwestern African-American women

Authors
 JoEllen Wilbur  ;  Peggy J Chandler  ;  Hyeonkyeong Lee  ;  Barbara Dancy 
Citation
 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE MEDICINE, Vol.25(3 suppl. 1) : 45-52, 2003 
Journal Title
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE MEDICINE
ISSN
 0749-3797 
Issue Date
2003
MeSH
Adult ; African Americans* ; Exercise* ; Female ; Humans ; Middle Aged ; MidwesternUnited States/epidemiology ; Social Environment ; Socioeconomic Factors ; UrbanPopulation* ; Women's Health*
Keywords
14499809
Abstract
BACKGROUND: African-American women are at higher risk than white women of cardiovascular disease and stroke. In addition, fewer African-American women reap the cardiovascular benefits of exercise, because of low physical activity. The study goals were to identify personal, social environmental, and physical environmental correlates of physical activity of urban-dwelling, Midwestern, African-American women and to obtain their recommendations for increasing exercise in their communities.
METHODS: A face-to-face interview (Women and Physical Activity Survey) covering personal, social environmental, and physical environmental correlates of physical activity was administered to 399 volunteer African-American women aged 20 to 50 years, living in Chicago. Physical activity was measured with questions on lifestyle and planned leisure-time activity (exercise) from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
RESULTS: The women were from a wide socioeconomic spectrum of education and income. Forty-two percent of the women met current recommendations for moderate or vigorous physical activity; 48% were insufficiently active; and 9% were inactive. The following groups of women were more likely to be physically active: women with at least a high school education; women with perceived good health; women who knew people who exercise; and women who viewed the neighborhood as safe. These findings were statistically significant.
CONCLUSIONS: Interventions that target urban African-American women must address the safety of the physical environment and personal and social environmental correlates of physical activity, and they should focus especially on inactive women who have less than a high school education or perceive themselves to be in poor health.
Full Text
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0749379703001648
Appears in Collections:
3. College of Nursing (간호대학) > Dept. of Nursing (간호학과) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Lee, Hyeonkyeong(이현경) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9558-7737
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/113217
사서에게 알리기
  feedback

qrcode

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Browse

Links