Publication | Closed Access
Neighborhood Social Cohesion and Disorder in Relation to Walking in Community-Dwelling Older Adults
256
Citations
44
References
2009
Year
Social IsolationUrban HealthIndependent LivingCommunity-dwelling Older AdultsSocial Determinants Of HealthNeighborhood Social CohesionSocial HealthPublic HealthNeighborhood Social ConditionsHealth SciencesGeriatricsCommunity EngagementSocial GerontologyCommunity ParticipationCommunity DevelopmentCommunity EnvironmentSociologyHealth BehaviorOlder AdultsNeighborhood Conditions
Objectives. To examine the role of neighborhood social conditions and walking in community-dwelling older adults. Methods. A multi-level analysis of data from 4,317 older adults (mean age = 74.5; 73% black) from a geographically-defined urban community. Participants completed structured interviews including 14 questions on neighborhood conditions and self-reported walking. The neighborhood questions were summarized into individual-level measures of perceived neighborhood social cohesion and disorder. These measures were aggregated by neighborhood to construct neighborhood-level measures of social cohesion and disorder. Results. Neighborhood-level disorder, but not social cohesion, was significantly associated with walking, independent individual-level neighborhood perceptions and other correlates of walking. Further adjustment for race weakened this association to a marginally significant level. Discussion. Neighborhood conditions may shape walking behavior in older adults, especially conditions that reflect physical neglect or social threat. Promotion of walking behavior in older adults may require improvement of the safety and upkeep of the neighborhood environment.
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