Abstract

BackgroundPhysical inactivity is a global pandemic associated with a high burden of disease and premature mortality. There is also a trend in growing economic inequalities which impacts population health. There is no global analysis of the relationship between income inequality and population levels of physical inactivity.MethodsTwo thousand sixteen World Health Organisation’s country level data about compliance with the 2010 global physical activity guidelines were analysed against country level income interquantile ratio data obtained from the World Bank, OECD and World Income Inequality Database. The analysis was stratified by country income (Low, Middle and High) according to the World Bank classification and gender. Multiple regression was used to quantify the association between physical activity and income inequality. Models were adjusted for GDP and percentage of GDP spent on health care for each country and out of pocket health care spent.ResultsSignificantly higher levels of inactivity and a wider gap between the percentage of women and men meeting global physical activity guidelines were found in countries with higher income inequality in high and middle income countries irrespective of a country wealth and spend on health care. For example, in higher income countries, for each point increase in the interquantile ratio data, levels of inactivity in women were 3.73% (CI 0.89 6.57) higher, levels of inactivity in men were 2.04% (CI 0.08 4.15) higher and the gap in inactivity levels between women and men was 1.50% larger (CI 0.16 2.83). Similar relationships were found in middle income countries with lower effect sizes. These relationships were, however, not demonstrated in the low-income countries.ConclusionsEconomic inequalities, particularly in high- and middle- income countries might contribute to physical inactivity and might be an important factor to consider and address in order to combat the global inactivity pandemic and to achieve the World Health Organisation target for inactivity reduction.

Highlights

  • Physical inactivity is a global pandemic associated with a high burden of disease and premature mortality

  • Physical inactivity is a global pandemic [1] associated with negative physical and mental health outcomes like cardiovascular diseases, type 2 diabetes, obesity, some types of cancer, and depression; and a premature mortality burden estimated at 5.3 million death per annum [2]

  • Economic factors are noticeably absent from the World Health Organisation (WHO) action plan and some of the proposed systems thought to determine population levels of physical activity [4]

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Summary

Introduction

Physical inactivity is a global pandemic associated with a high burden of disease and premature mortality. The World Health Organisation (WHO) has set a target for a 10% reduction in physical inactivity by 2025, against which a global action plan was launched in 2018 [9]. As part of this plan, the global physical activity recommendations are updated this year for all age groups [10]. Economic factors are noticeably absent from the WHO action plan and some of the proposed systems thought to determine population levels of physical activity [4]. The impact of the economic context on physical activity has received very little attention, this despite the rise in economic inequality globally and its impact on population health and health inequalities [11]

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