Abstract

Background: Little is known about the link between perceived neighborhood walkability and prevalence of chronic disease. Even less is known regarding this association among Hispanic/Latino adults, despite exhibiting high rates of chronic diseases. Stress due to racial discrimination is a harmful social determinant of health in Hispanics/Latinos. Having both low perceived neighborhood walkability and high racial discrimination stress may exacerbate the chronic disease status of Hispanics/Latinos. Among a U.S. national sample of Hispanic/Latino adults, this cross-sectional study aims to examine (1) the associations among overall perceived neighborhood walkability, racial discrimination stress, and having a chronic health condition; and (2) whether overall perceived neighborhood walkability moderates the hypothesized association between racial discrimination stress and having a chronic health condition.Methods: In January 2018, 798 Hispanic/Latino adults (M age = 39.7 years, SD = 15.1; 58.6% female; 70.0% U.S. born; 52.0% Mexican/Mexican American) responded to a survey via Qualtrics Panels. Surveys included the Neighborhood Environment Walkability Scale-Abbreviated, Hispanic Stress Inventory-2, and self-reported presence/absence of chronic health conditions (e.g., hypertension, heart disease). A logistic regression was conducted testing for the moderation of the main effect of racial discrimination stress on the presence of a chronic health condition by overall perceived neighborhood walkability.Results: After controlling for age, body mass index, and income, racial discrimination stress was inversely associated with overall perceived neighborhood walkability (b = −0.18, p < 0.001) and positively associated with having a chronic health condition (OR = 1.02; 95% CI [1.00, 1.03]). While overall perceived neighborhood walkability was not associated with having a chronic health condition, perceived crime safety was inversely associated with having a chronic health condition (OR = 0.94; 95% CI [0.89, 0.99]). Perceived crime safety moderated the positive association between discrimination stress and having a chronic health condition, such that the association was only significant among those who perceived their neighborhood to be less safe (β = −0.004, 95% CI [−0.01, −0.00]).Conclusions: Overall perceived neighborhood walkability was inversely associated with racial discrimination stress, but not associated with having a chronic health condition. Perceived neighborhood crime safety, but not infrastructure or aesthetics, matters when it comes to the link between racial discrimination stress and having a chronic health condition among Hispanics/Latinos.

Highlights

  • In the United States, chronic diseases including cancer, coronary heart disease, and type 2 diabetes are the leading causes of death among Hispanics/Latinos [1, 2]

  • Among a national sample of U.S Hispanic/Latino adults, this study aims to [1] test the associations among overall perceived neighborhood walkability, racial discrimination stress, and having a chronic health condition; and [2] examine whether overall perceived neighborhood walkability moderates the association between racial discrimination stress and having a chronic health condition

  • The full model results displayed in Model 3 within Table 2 show that the interaction between racial discrimination stress and perceived walkability on having a chronic health condition was not significant (OR = 0.999; 95% CI [0.997, 1.001]), suggesting the association between racial discrimination stress and health did not vary by overall perceived neighborhood walkability

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Summary

Introduction

In the United States, chronic diseases including cancer, coronary heart disease, and type 2 diabetes are the leading causes of death among Hispanics/Latinos [1, 2]. A 10-year longitudinal study employing objective measures found that, as neighborhoods became more walkable over time, community-wide diabetes prevalence and cardiovascular disease risk (e.g., high blood pressure and cholesterol) declined [8]. The facilitation of physical activity is one behavioral mechanism identified as connecting greater objectively-measured walkability with lower prevalence of chronic disease [4, 9,10,11,12]. Little is known about the link between perceived neighborhood walkability and prevalence of chronic disease. Even less is known regarding this association among Hispanic/Latino adults, despite exhibiting high rates of chronic diseases. Stress due to racial discrimination is a harmful social determinant of health in Hispanics/Latinos Having both low perceived neighborhood walkability and high racial discrimination stress may exacerbate the chronic disease status of Hispanics/Latinos. Among a U.S national sample of Hispanic/Latino adults, this cross-sectional study aims to examine [1] the associations among overall perceived neighborhood walkability, racial discrimination stress, and having a chronic health condition; and [2] whether overall perceived neighborhood walkability moderates the hypothesized association between racial discrimination stress and having a chronic health condition

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