Neighborhood Walkability and BMI Change: A National Study of Veterans in Large Urban Areas Journal Article


Authors: Tarlov, E; Silva, A; Wing, C; Slater, S; Matthews, S. A.; Jones, K. K.; Zenk, S. N.
Article Title: Neighborhood Walkability and BMI Change: A National Study of Veterans in Large Urban Areas
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Improving neighborhood walkability has been proposed as a policy intervention to reduce obesity. The objective of this study was to evaluate longitudinal relationships between neighborhood walkability and body weight among adults living in large urban areas. METHODS: In this retrospective longitudinal study of United States military veterans using Department of Veterans Affairs health care, Veterans Affairs clinical and administrative data (2007-2014) were linked to environmental measures constructed from public (2006-2014) and proprietary (2008-2014) sources, and linear regression models with person fixed effects were used to estimate associations between walkability and BMI among 758,434 men and 70,319 women aged 20 to 80 years in 2009 to 2014. RESULTS: Neighborhood walkability was associated with small reductions in BMI. Effects were most pronounced among men aged 30 to 49 and 50 to 64. For women, differences were largest in the two youngest age groups, 20 to 29 and 30 to 49, though only estimates for all women combined were statistically significant. For women aged 30 to 49, effect sizes grew when the sample was limited to those who remained in the same neighborhood during the entire follow-up period. CONCLUSIONS: Investments in the built environment to improve walkability may be a useful strategy for weight control in some segments of the adult population.
Journal Title: Obesity (Silver Spring, Md.)
Volume: 28
Issue: 1
ISSN: 1930-739X
Publisher: The Obesity Society (TOS). This article has been contributed to by US Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA  
Date Published: 2020
Start Page: 46
End Page: 54
Language: eng
DOI/URL:
Notes: LR: 20200415; CI: © 2019; GR: R01 CA172726/CA/NCI NIH HHS/United States; JID: 101264860; NIHMS1534867; PMCR: 2021/01/01; 2018/07/08 00:00 [received]; 2019/07/15 00:00 [accepted]; 2021/01/01 00:00 [pmc-release]; 2019/12/06 06:00 [pubmed]; 2019/12/06 06:00 [medline]; 2019/12/06 06:00 [entrez]; ppublish