Abstract
Background: China’s rapid urban growth is associated with an increasingly unhealthy population. Urban planners can design cities to promote healthy lifestyles, but to re-engineer the existing built environment is no simple task. We assessed whether a simple modification of the built environment was associated with altered perceptions of, and ambulation in, that environment.
Methods: We adjusted a single-rail stair banister (length 3 m, height 1 m) in an urban area of Hong Kong, China, to increase or decrease the convergence angle with the stairs by 10% (plus or minus 1.91°). When positioned conventionally, the banister was parallel to the stairs (2.19 m width, 26.5° incline). 92 participants (mean age 19.71 [0.79], 54 male and 38 female) who were unaware that the banister diverged from (n=32), converged with (n=30), or was parallel to the stairs (n=30), visually estimated the angle of incline of the stairs from the top by rotating a disk to match the slant of the staircase. Walking speed (metres per second) was video-recorded surreptitiously as a sub-sample of the participants (n=36) approached the stairs with the banister in each position. Data were analysed using one-way analysis of variance followed by Bonferroni comparisons. Ethical approval of the study was obtained from the University of Hong Kong Research Ethics Committee, and participants provided written informed consent to participate.
Findings: Visual estimations differed between the groups (F2,70=3.11, p=0.05, ηp2=0.08); estimates of angle were smaller when the banister converged with the stairs (32.53 [8.39]°) than when it diverged (39.69 [9.50]°) (p=0.007) or was parallel (39.88 [8.92]°) (p=0.006). Walking speeds in the final three strides preceding transition to stair descent also differed (F2,70,70=3.11, p=0.05, ηp2=0.08) with mean walking speed slower when the banister diverged (1.24 [0.26] m/s) than when it converged (1.36 [0.19] m/s) (p=0.046).
Interpretation: Modification of the angle of a stair banister was associated with differences in perception of the steepness of stairs and in walking behavior during approach to the stairs. Problems associated with rapid urban development, including falls in older people and physical inactivity, are high on the health agenda of the Chinese government. Future work should examine whether stairs that appear less steep are more readily climbed, thus promoting physical activity, and whether stepping parameters are improved, thus promoting fewer falls.
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Status: | Published |
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Refereed: | Yes |
Publisher: | The Lancet Publishing Group |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | 11 Medical And Health Sciences, General & Internal Medicine, |
Depositing User (symplectic) | Deposited by Poolton, Jamie |
Date Deposited: | 28 Nov 2016 09:01 |
Last Modified: | 13 Jul 2024 19:58 |
Event Title: | The Lancet-CAMS Health Summit, 2016 |
Item Type: | Conference or Workshop Item (Poster) |
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