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Can green space quantity and quality help prevent postpartum weight gain? A longitudinal study

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 05:53 authored by Xiaoqi Feng, Thomas Astell-BurtThomas Astell-Burt
Background: Postpartum weight gain is a well-known challenge for many mothers, but associations with green space quantity and quality have not been investigated. Methods: This longitudinal study used data on 3843 mothers living in Australia tracked biennially for 15 years post partum from 2004 onwards. Multilevel growth curve models adjusted for confounding were used to examine the patterning of body mass index (BMI) in relation to green space quantity, measured by percentage land use, and green space quality, measured by self-report. Two-way interaction terms were fitted to investigate time-contingent associations between BMI and green space. Results: Compared with mothers in areas with ≤5% green space, adjusted BMI coefficients were -0.43 kg/m2 (SE 0.37), -0.69 kg/m2 (SE 0.32) -0.86 kg/m2 (SE 0.33) and -0.80 kg/m2 (SE 0.41) among mothers in areas with 6%-10%, 11%-20%, 21%-40% and ≥41% green space, respectively. There were no independent associations between BMI and green space quality. Evidence suggested mothers living in areas with 21%-40% green space had the lowest BMI, whether they agreed that local parks were good quality (-0.89 kg/m2 (SE 0.34)) or not (-0.93 kg/m2 (SE 0.35)). Mothers in the greenest areas only had statistically significantly lower BMI if they perceived local parks as high quality (-0.89 kg/m2 (SE 0.41)). There was limited evidence that these associations varied with respect to the number of years post partum. Conclusion: These findings may suggest that urban greening strategies to achieve a threshold of at least 21% or more green space in an area may help reduce, but not fully prevent postpartum weight gain. Potential mechanisms warrant investigation.

Funding

Classifying local environmental attributes for healthier, more equitable child development

National Health and Medical Research Council

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What types of local built environment synergise with, or antagonise the benefits of clinical management for the prevention of cardiovascular events among people with type 2 diabetes mellitus? Longitudinal analysis of a cohort of 20,765 Australians

National Health and Medical Research Council

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History

Citation

Feng, X. & Astell-Burt, T. (2019). Can green space quantity and quality help prevent postpartum weight gain? A longitudinal study. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 73 295-302.

Journal title

Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health

Volume

73

Issue

4

Pagination

295-302

Language

English

RIS ID

133066

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