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1.
Acta sci., Health sci ; 44: e57942, Jan. 14, 2022.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1367680

ABSTRACT

The objective of this study was to analyse microbiological organisms in different locations and regions for physical activity in the city of João Pessoa, Brazil. Samples were collected on various objects used, such as: mattresses, drinking fountains, gloves, cell phones and others. The samples were collected in João Pessoa-PB, following the Standard Operating Procedure-SOP/ Microbiology of a specialized laboratory. The collection took place in the five macro-regions: North, South, East, West and Center. Foreach region samples were collected in one public place (square), a private one (gym) and one school (public or private), totaling fifteen collected sites and 450 samples. The following microorganisms were studied in all analyzed surfaces: Bacillus sp, Escherichia Coli, Klebsiella sppor Enterobacter sppand Coag. Neg. Staphylococcus.All regions had a high contamination level by some microorganism. The highest rates were found in the western, central and northern regions -96, 94 and 93% respectively. The Coag. Neg.Staphylococcus presented the highest and lowest incidence rates in the South and East regions, with 43.33 and 6.67%, respectively, as well as Klebsiella sppor Enterobacter spp, which presented high levels. It is concluded that there is a microorganisms' contamination in the most varied places and regions where physical activity practices are developed, with a predominance of Coag. Neg.Staphylococcusand Klebsiella sppor Enterobacter spp. These results lead to a warning about the hygiene importance in places for physical activity practice, especially in pandemic times (COVID-19), since almost all the evaluated surfaces were contaminated.


Subject(s)
Hygiene , Fitness Centers/supply & distribution , COVID-19/pathology , Schools/supply & distribution , Bacillus/pathogenicity , Exercise/physiology , Biological Contamination , Enterobacter/pathogenicity , Environmental Microbiology , Escherichia/pathogenicity , Pandemics/statistics & numerical data , Klebsiella/pathogenicity , Noxae
2.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-677892

ABSTRACT

Foi realizado na cidade de Pelotas/RS um censo com trabalhadores de Educação Física atuantes em academias de ginásticas com o objetivo de descrever as características de saúde dessa população. O estudo observacional entrevistou 497 trabalhadores obtendo informações referentes a questões econômicas, sociodemográficas, comportamentais (nível de atividade física, tabagismo e ingestão de álcool) e relacionadas à saúde como sintomas musculoesqueléticos, problemas de voz e transtornos psiquiátricos menores. A quase totalidade dos entrevistados foi classificada como ativos, 1,2% eram fumantes e mais da metade dos homens e 45% das mulheres relataram ingestão exagerada de álcool. Quanto à saúde vocal, todos os trabalhadores foram classificados como tendo saúde excelente; 7,6% possuíam transtornos psiquiátricos menores e os segmentos corporais mais relatados com dor ou desconforto no último ano foram a coluna lombar, os joelhos e pescoço. O diagnóstico de saúde desses trabalhadores mostrou elevada prevalência de atividade física e baixas frequências de tabagismo, problemas de voz e transtornos psiquiátricos menores Entretanto, é necessário estratégias de mudanças em relação ao consumo excessivo de álcool e cuidados com a coluna lombar e joelhos.


It was held in the city of Pelotas/RS a census with Physical Education workers in gyms in order to describe their health characteristics. The observational study interviewed 497 workers obtaining information related to economic, demographic, behavioral (physical activity, smoking and alcohol intake) and health-related as musculoskeletal symptoms, voice problems and psychiatric disorders. Almost all of them were classified as physically active, 1.2% were smokers and more than half of men and 45% of women reported excessive alcohol intake. All workers were classified as having excellent vocal health, 7.6% had psychiatric disorders and the body segments most reported with pain or discomfort in the last year were the lumbar spine, knees and neck. The health results showed high prevalence of physical activity and low frequencies of smoking, voice problems and psychiatric disorders. However, strategies to change excessive alcohol consumption and care to lumbar spine and knees are necessary.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adolescent , Young Adult , Middle Aged , Fitness Centers/statistics & numerical data , Fitness Centers/supply & distribution , Disease/classification , Musculoskeletal Pain/classification , Musculoskeletal Pain/diagnosis , Musculoskeletal Pain/prevention & control , Mental Disorders/classification , Mental Disorders/diagnosis , Mental Disorders/prevention & control , Voice
3.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ; 9: 90, 2012 Jul 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22849512

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The aim of this study is to explore whether availability of sports facilities, parks, and neighbourhood social capital (NSC) and their interaction are associated with leisure time sports participation among Dutch adolescents. METHODS: Cross-sectional analyses were conducted on complete data from the last wave of the YouRAction evaluation trial. Adolescents (n = 852) completed a questionnaire asking for sports participation, perceived NSC and demographics. Ecometric methods were used to aggregate perceived NSC to zip code level. Availability of sports facilities and parks was assessed by means of geographic information systems within the zip-code area and within a 1600 meter buffer. Multilevel logistic regression analyses, with neighborhood and individual as levels, were conducted to examine associations between physical and social environmental factors and leisure time sports participation. Simple slopes analysis was conducted to decompose interaction effects. RESULTS: NSC was significantly associated with sports participation (OR: 3.51 (95%CI: 1.18;10.41)) after adjustment for potential confounders. Availability of sports facilities and availability of parks were not associated with sports participation. A significant interaction between NSC and density of parks within the neighbourhood area (OR: 1.22 (90%CI: 1.01;1.34)) was found. Decomposition of the interaction term showed that adolescents were most likely to engage in leisure time sports when both availability of parks and NSC were highest. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study indicate that leisure time sports participation is associated with levels of NSC, but not with availability of parks or sports facilities. In addition, NSC and availability of parks in the zip code area interacted in such a way that leisure time sports participation is most likely among adolescents living in zip code areas with higher levels of NSC, and higher availability of parks. Hence, availability of parks appears only to be important for leisure time sports participation when NSC is high.


Subject(s)
Fitness Centers/supply & distribution , Social Environment , Sports , Adolescent , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Leisure Activities/psychology , Male , Netherlands , Odds Ratio , Public Facilities/statistics & numerical data
4.
Health Educ Res ; 25(3): 489-97, 2010 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20382675

ABSTRACT

This longitudinal study aimed to identify individual and environmental predictors of adolescents' sports participation and to examine whether availability of sports facilities moderated the intention-behaviour relation. Data were obtained from the ENvironmental Determinants of Obesity in Rotterdam SchoolchildrEn study (2005/2006 to 2007/2008). A total of 247 adolescents (48% boys, mean age at follow-up 15 years) completed the surveys at baseline and follow-up. At baseline, adolescents completed a survey that assessed engagement in sports participation, attitude, subjective norm, perceived behavioural control and intention towards sports participation. Availability of sports facilities (availability) was assessed using a geographic information system. At follow-up, sports participation was again examined. Multiple logistic regression analyses were conducted to test associations between availability of sports facilities, theory of planned behaviour variables and the interaction of intention by availability of sports facilities, with sports participation at follow-up. Simple slopes analysis was conducted to decompose the interaction effect. A significant availability x intention interaction effect [odds ratio: 1.10; 95% confidence interval: 1.00-1.20] was found. Simple slopes analysis showed that intention was more strongly associated with sports participation when sports facilities were more readily available. The results of this study indicate that the intention-sports participation association appears to be stronger when more facilities are available.


Subject(s)
Environment Design , Fitness Centers/supply & distribution , Public Facilities , Sports , Adolescent , Female , Humans , Intention , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Netherlands
5.
Health Place ; 15(2): 553-561, 2009 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18986825

ABSTRACT

The aim of the study was to evaluate the association of the availability of sports facilities and socioeconomic environment with jogging, swimming and gym use in Spain. The indicators of availability of sports facilities were the number of swimming pools and the number of gyms per 10,000 population. The indicators of socioeconomic environment were average provincial income and provincial unemployment rate. The number of sports facilities was not related with either swimming or gym use and the indicators of socioeconomic environment were not associated with swimming in either sex, or with gym use in men. The findings of this study do not support the hypotheses proposed in previous investigations to explain the consistent relation between socioeconomic environment and lack of physical activity.


Subject(s)
Fitness Centers/supply & distribution , Motor Activity , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Jogging , Leisure Activities , Male , Middle Aged , Residence Characteristics , Socioeconomic Factors , Spain , Swimming , Swimming Pools
7.
Ann Epidemiol ; 18(5): 371-7, 2008 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18261922

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To validate a commercial database of community-level physical activity facilities that can be used in future research examining associations between access to physical activity facilities and individual-level physical activity and obesity. METHODS: Physical activity facility characteristics and locations obtained from a commercial database were compared to a field census conducted in 80 census block groups within two U.S. communities. Agreement statistics, agreement of administratively defined neighborhoods, and distance between locations were used to quantify count, attribute, and positional error. RESULTS: There was moderate agreement (concordance: nonurban: 0.39; urban: 0.46) of presence of any physical activity facility and poor to moderate agreement (kappa range: 0.14 to 0.76) of physical activity facility type. The mean Euclidean distance between commercial database versus field census locations was 757 and 35 m in the nonurban and urban communities, respectively. However, 94% and 100% of nonurban and urban physical activity facilities, respectively, fell into the same 5-digit ZIP code, dropping to 92% and 98% in the same block group and 71% along the same street. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that the commercial database of physical activity facilities may contain appreciable error, but patterns of error suggest that built environment-health associations are likely biased downward.


Subject(s)
Fitness Centers/supply & distribution , Geographic Information Systems/standards , Maps as Topic , Residence Characteristics/statistics & numerical data , Databases, Factual , Environment Design , Health Behavior , Humans , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
8.
Am J Prev Med ; 33(4 Suppl): S292-300, 2007 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17884577

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: A significant number of American youth do not participate in sufficient levels of physical activity. METHODS: This article reports the association between the availability of commercial physical activity-related facilities and self-reported physical activity behavior among United States adolescents. Geographic identifiers at the ZIP-code level were used to combine repeated cross-sections of individual-level data on 8th-, 10th-, and 12th-grade adolescents from the Monitoring the Future (MTF) Survey with external commercial physical activity-related facility outlet density measures obtained from business lists from Dun and Bradstreet for the years 1997 through 2003. The estimation samples based on questions from different survey forms included a total of 195,702 observations on which information on physical activity (sports, athletics, or exercise) was available and 58,876 observations on which information on vigorous exercise behavior was available. RESULTS: The results showed a statistically significant but very small association between local-area per capita availability of commercial physical activity-related facilities and physical activity behavior among U.S. adolescents. An additional local-area facility per 10,000 capita was associated with only a 0.22 percentage point increase in frequent vigorous exercise among the full sample of adolescents. By gender and grade level, the study found significant associations among female and older students: increasing availability from a low (1 facility) to a high (8 facilities) number of local-area facilities was associated with a 6.6% and 9.0% increase in frequent physical activity and frequent vigorous exercise among 12th-grade girls, respectively, and a 6.4% increase in frequent vigorous exercise among 12th-grade boys. CONCLUSIONS: Improving the availability of commercial physical activity-related opportunities among underserved populations may help to increase activity levels among older adolescents and girls.


Subject(s)
Commerce , Exercise , Fitness Centers/supply & distribution , Adolescent , Data Collection , Female , Humans , Male , Physical Fitness , United States
9.
J Epidemiol Community Health ; 61(10): 882-90, 2007 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17873224

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Residence in a deprived neighbourhood is associated with lower rates of physical activity. Little is known about the manifestation of deprivation that mediates this relationship. This study aimed to investigate whether access to physical activity resources mediated the relationship between neighbourhood socioeconomic status and physical activity among women. METHOD: Individual data from women participating in the Stanford Heart Disease Prevention Program (1979-90) were linked to census and archival data from existing records. Multilevel regression models were examined for energy expenditure and moderate and vigorous physical activity as reported in physical activity recalls. RESULTS: After accounting for individual-level socioeconomic status, women who lived in lower-socioeconomic status neighbourhoods reported greater energy expenditure, but undertook less moderate physical activity, than women in moderate-socioeconomic status neighbourhoods. In contrast, women living in higher-socioeconomic status neighbourhoods reported more vigorous physical activity than women in moderate-socioeconomic status neighbourhoods. Although availability of physical activity resources did not appear to mediate any neighbourhood socioeconomic status associations, several significant interactions emerged, suggesting that women with low income or who live in lower-socioeconomic status neighbourhoods may differentially benefit from greater physical activity resource availability. DISCUSSION: Although we found expected relationships between residence in a lower-socioeconomic status neighbourhood and undertaking less moderate or vigorous physical activity among women, we also found that these same women reported greater overall energy expenditure, perhaps as a result of greater work or travel demands. Greater availability of physical activity resources nearby appears to differentially benefit women living in lower-socioeconomic status neighbourhoods and low-income women, having implications for policy-making and planning.


Subject(s)
Fitness Centers/supply & distribution , Motor Activity , Social Class , Adult , Aged , California , Energy Metabolism , Female , Heart Diseases/prevention & control , Humans , Medical Record Linkage , Middle Aged , Residence Characteristics , Socioeconomic Factors
10.
J Urban Health ; 84(3): 346-59, 2007 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17401691

ABSTRACT

A number of studies in recent years have identified both self-report and objectively measured accessibility of recreational facilities as important predictors of physical activity in youth. Yet, few studies have: (1) examined the relationship between the number and proximity of objectively measured neighborhood physical activity facilities and respondents' perceptions and (2) compared objective and self-report measures as predictors of physical activity. This study uses data on 1,367 6th-grade girls who participated in the Trial of Activity for Adolescent Girls (TAAG) to explore these issues. Girls reported whether nine different types of recreational facilities were easily accessible. These facilities included basketball courts, golf courses, martial arts studios, playing fields, tracks, skating rinks, swimming pools, tennis courts, and dance/gymnastic clubs. Next, geographic information systems (GIS) were used to identify all the parks, schools, and commercial sites for physical activity located within a mile of each girl's home. These sites were then visited to inventory the types of facilities available. Girls wore accelerometers to measure their weekly minutes of non-school metabolic equivalent weighted moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MW-MVPA). The number of facilities within a half-mile of girls' homes strongly predicted the perception of easy access to seven out of nine facility types. Both individual facility perceptions and the total number of facilities perceived were associated with increased physical activity. For each additional facility perceived, girls clocked 3% more metabolic equivalent weighted moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (p < 0.001). Although girls tended to record 3% more of this kind of physical activity (p < 0.05) per basketball court within a mile of their homes, objective facility measures were otherwise unrelated to physical activity. The results from this study suggest that raising the profile of existing facilities may help increase physical activity among adolescent girls.


Subject(s)
Adolescent Behavior/psychology , Environment Design , Fitness Centers/supply & distribution , Motor Activity/physiology , Perception , Public Facilities/statistics & numerical data , Residence Characteristics/classification , Sports/physiology , Acceleration , Adolescent , Adolescent Behavior/physiology , Female , Humans , Monitoring, Ambulatory/instrumentation , Observation , Recreation , Residence Characteristics/statistics & numerical data , Schools/supply & distribution , Sports/statistics & numerical data , Surveys and Questionnaires , Transportation/statistics & numerical data , United States , Urban Health
11.
Am J Public Health ; 97(3): 509-14, 2007 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17267728

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Parks provide places for people to experience nature, engage in physical activity, and relax. We studied how residents in low-income, minority communities use public, urban neighborhood parks and how parks contribute to physical activity. METHODS: In 8 public parks, we used direct observation to document the number, gender, race/ethnicity, age group, and activity level of park users 4 times per day, 7 days per week. We also interviewed 713 park users and 605 area residents living within 2 miles of each park. RESULTS: On average, over 2000 individuals were counted in each park, and about two thirds were sedentary when observed. More males than females used the parks, and males were twice as likely to be vigorously active. Interviewees identified the park as the most common place they exercised. Both park use and exercise levels of individuals were predicted by proximity of their residence to the park. CONCLUSIONS: Public parks are critical resources for physical activity in minority communities. Because residential proximity is strongly associated with physical activity and park use, the number and location of parks are currently insufficient to serve local populations well.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Health/ethnology , Fitness Centers/statistics & numerical data , Minority Groups/psychology , Public Facilities/statistics & numerical data , Recreation/psychology , Urban Health/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Child , Energy Metabolism/physiology , Exercise/physiology , Female , Fitness Centers/supply & distribution , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Los Angeles , Male , Middle Aged , Motor Activity/physiology , Poverty , Recreation/physiology , Residence Characteristics/classification
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