Healthy Neighborhoods May Be Associated With Lower Diabetes Risk

Individuals living in neighborhoods conducive to physical activity and providing access to healthy foods may have a lower risk of developing type 2 diabetes in a 5-year period, according to a report in the Archives of Internal Medicine.

“The worldwide epidemic of type 2 diabetes mellitus is largely driven by the combined rise in obesity, intake of energy-dense or nutrient-poor foods and physical inactivity,” the authors write as background information in the article.

Interventions to reduce risk on the individual level — including surgery, medication and behavior change — have had mixed results. Large-scale behavior change may be necessary to reverse the diabetes epidemic, but such a change is difficult to achieve and may be unsustainable if the surrounding environment is not supportive.

Amy H. Auchincloss, PhD, MPH, of Drexel University School of Public Health, Philadelphia and colleagues studied 2,285 adults age 45 to 84 who were initially examined between 2000 and 2002. Study participants were from three of the sites in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) for which neighborhood level data were obtained: Baltimore; Forsyth County, N.C. and New York City/Bronx. Blood glucose levels were obtained from study participants at baseline and at three follow-up examinations, during which other individual characteristics also were assessed including diet, body mass index (BMI) and physical activity levels.

Measures of neighborhood resources were obtained from a separate assessment, the Community Survey, in which other residents of the same neighborhoods, defined as the area within a 20-minute walk or a mile from their homes, rated the suitability of their environment for physical activity and access to healthy foods.

After a median of 5 years of follow-up, 233 of the 2,285 participants (10.2%) developed diabetes. Scores for physical activity and healthy foods were calculated for each neighborhood on scales of one to five (with five representing the healthiest areas). Average neighborhood scores were 3.68 for physical activity and 3.36 for healthy foods.

“Better neighborhood resources, determined by a combined score for physical activity and healthy foods, were associated with a 38% lower incidence of type 2 diabetes,” the authors wrote. “The association remained statistically significant after further adjustment for individual dietary factors, physical activity level and body mass index.”

The increasing prevalence of type 2 diabetes in the past 30 years makes it urgent to identify environmental features that may mitigate risk.

“Current efforts to foster health-promoting environments include designing and modifying physical environments, such as zoning residential neighborhoods to require safe sidewalks, creating parks and attractive public green spaces and improving public transportation so that residents rely less on their cars; supporting fresh-food farmers’ markets in low-income, urban neighborhoods and assisting stores in those neighborhoods in improving their selection of healthy foods,” the authors conclude in a press release.

“Given the challenges of mounting an intervention at the individual level, it is heartening to read a study suggesting that it may be possible to decrease the incidence of diabetes by modifying the environment,” Mitchell H. Katz, MD, of the San Francisco Department of Public Health, writes in an accompanying editorial.

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