Associations between density and quality of health promotion programmes and built environment features across Jerusalem

Author:

Besor Omri1,Paltiel Ora1,Manor Orly1,Donchin Milka1,Rauch Orly1,Kaufman-Shriqui Vered23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nutrition Sciences, Braun School of Public Health & Community Medicine, The Hebrew University-Hadassah, Jerusalem, Israel

2. Department of Nutrition Sciences, School of Health Sciences, Ariel University, Ariel, Israel

3. Centre for Urban Health Solutions (C-UHS), St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Background Health promotion programmes (HPPs) have the potential to influence individual health, depending on their quality and characteristics. Little is known about how they interact with built environment features and neighbourhood demographics in cities with substantial health disparities. Methods Using the European Quality Instrument for Health Promotion (EQUIHP), we assessed the quality of HPPs, operating between 2016 and 2017, among adults aged 18–75 in Jerusalem. Areas were characterized by ethnicity and area socioeconomic level. Health information (body mass index, physical activity level) was obtained from the city profile survey. Geospatial information on the location and length of walking paths and bicycle lanes was obtained. Spearman correlations were used to assess associations among variables. Results Ninety-three HPPs operating in 349 locations in Jerusalem were identified. Programmes were unevenly distributed across urban planning areas (UPAs), with the highest density observed in the southwest, areas populated mainly by non-orthodox Jewish residents. However, the best performing HPPs based on EQUIHP score were in the north and east UPAs, inhabited primarily by Arab residents. At a neighbourhood level, characteristics of the built environment positively correlated with higher total EQUIHP scores: the ratio between walking lane length to the neighbourhood’s population size (r = 0.413, P < 0.001) and length of bicycle lane per population (r = 0.309, P = 0.5). Median EQUIHP score negatively correlated with the number of programmes per neighbourhood size (m2) (r = −0.327, P = 0.006) and neighbourhood average socioeconomic status (SES; r = −0.266, P = 0.027). Conclusions Our findings suggest that higher quality HPPs were preferentially located in areas of lower SES and served minority populations in Jerusalem.

Funder

Israel Ministry of Science, Technology and Space

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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