The built environment is more predictive of cardiometabolic health than other aspects of lifestyle in two rapidly transitioning Indigenous populations.
Marina M WatowichAudrey M ArnerSelina WangEchwa JohnJohn C KahumbuPatricia KinyuaAnjelina LopurudoiFrancis LotukoiCharles M MwaiBenjamin MuhoyaBoniface MukomaKar Lye TamTan Bee Ting A/P Tan Boon HuatMichael D GurvenYvonne Ai-Lian LimDino J MartinsSospeter Ngoci NjeruNg Kee SeongVivek V VenkataramanIan J WallaceJulien F AyrolesThomas S KraftAmanda J LeaPublished in: medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences (2024)
Our analysis of comparable data from Indigenous peoples in East Africa and Southeast Asia revealed a surprising amount of generalizability: in both contexts, measures of local infrastructure and built environment are consistently more predictive of cardiometabolic health than other facets of lifestyle that are seemingly more proximate to health, such as diet. We hypothesize that this is because the built environment impacts unmeasured proximate drivers like physical activity, increased stress, and broader access to market goods, and serves as a proxy for the duration of time that communities have been market-integrated.