
Poland | A long-term longitudinal birth cohort study has revealed that a person’s childhood residential environment and family socioeconomic status can significantly impact their physical exercise habits well into adulthood. By tracking hundreds of participants over several decades, researchers demonstrated that the geographic and economic foundations of early childhood help dictate daily movement volumes later in life.The tracking data showed that men from affluent backgrounds who grew up in rural settings were considerably more active at age 35 than peers from identical socioeconomic classes raised in cities, recording nearly thirty minutes more physical activity per day. These variations remained prominent even after adjusting for body mass index, current residential locations, and occupational physical demands. Interestingly, researchers noted no statistically significant correlation between early environmental backgrounds and adult physical output among the women tracked.
Source: University of Oulu
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