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Tidy house, fitter body?

06.02.10 | Indiana University

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An Indiana University study that examined the relationship between physical activity and a range of variables involving urban residents' homes and neighborhoods found that the inside of study subjects' homes had more to do with higher physical activity levels than the sidewalks, lighting and other elements considered.

"At the end of the day, the interior condition of their house seemed to be the only thing affecting their physical activity," said NiCole Keith, associate professor in the Department of Physical Education at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis. "It was not at all what we expected."

The study involved 998 African Americans ages 49-65 who lived in St. Louis and participated in the African American Health longitudinal study, which began in 2000. African Americans, notes Keith, are disproportionally affected by risk factors for cardiovascular disease. Physical activity can reduce the likelihood that people will develop risk factors for cardiovascular disease and also reduce the effect of the risk factors when they exist. African Americans, however, have relatively low rates of physical activity.

Keith said efforts to increase physical activity rates in city-dwellers might need to be taken inside. Much attention has been given to improving sidewalks and other aspects of the built environment outside, which Keith said is worthwhile, but if people already are not active in their homes, researchers should look at ways to increase this.

"If you spend your day dusting, cleaning, doing laundry, you're active," she said. "This will inform interventions. They won't take 30 minutes to go for a walk, but they'll take 30 minutes to clean."

More about the study:

Keith said the findings were unexpected and raise more questions. They suggest that something about the condition of someone's residence drives physical activity, she said, or that people are being physically active while they keep their homes tidy.

"Are the types of people who take care of their bodies the same types of people who take care of their homes?" she asked.

Keith is presenting her findings on Wednesday from 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. in Hall C during the Environment, Policy and Physical Activity session.

Co-authors of the study are Daniel O. Clark, IU Center for Aging Research and the Regenstrief Institute; Douglas K. Miller, M.D., IU Center for Aging Research,the Regenstrief Institute, and director of the African American Health Project.

Keith can be reached at 317-278-8438 and nkeith@iupui.edu . The Department of Physical Education is part of the School of Physical Education and Tourism Management at IUPUI.

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Contact Information

NiCole Keith
nkeith@iupui.edu

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Indiana University. (2010, June 2). Tidy house, fitter body?. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LK57J2E1/tidy-house-fitter-body.html
MLA:
"Tidy house, fitter body?." Brightsurf News, Jun. 2 2010, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LK57J2E1/tidy-house-fitter-body.html.