Individual and environmental determinants of body mass index trajectories : results from a longitudinal study in Southern Sweden
(2026) In BMC Public Health 26.- Abstract
Full text links
BMC Public Health
. 2026 Apr 17;26(1):1273.
doi: 10.1186/s12889-026-27378-1.
Individual and environmental determinants of body mass index trajectories: results from a longitudinal study in Southern Sweden
Pauline Rebouillat 1 , Kristoffer Mattisson 2 , Giedre Gefenaite 3 , Per-Olof Östergren 4 , Peter M Nilsson 5 6 , Jonas Björk 2 7
Affiliations
PMID: 41998602 PMCID: PMC13091265 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-026-27378-1
Abstract
Exposure to natural environments is thought to benefit mental and physical health, but current evidence is mixed, and underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Considering the joint biodiversity, climate, and health crises, a better... (More)
Full text links
BMC Public Health
. 2026 Apr 17;26(1):1273.
doi: 10.1186/s12889-026-27378-1.
Individual and environmental determinants of body mass index trajectories: results from a longitudinal study in Southern Sweden
Pauline Rebouillat 1 , Kristoffer Mattisson 2 , Giedre Gefenaite 3 , Per-Olof Östergren 4 , Peter M Nilsson 5 6 , Jonas Björk 2 7
Affiliations
PMID: 41998602 PMCID: PMC13091265 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-026-27378-1
Abstract
Exposure to natural environments is thought to benefit mental and physical health, but current evidence is mixed, and underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Considering the joint biodiversity, climate, and health crises, a better understanding of the interplay between individuals and their environment is imperative. This study aimed to (1) identify Body Mass Index (BMI) trajectories in the Scania Public Health Cohort (SPHC), (2) characterise trajectories in terms of sociodemographics, lifestyle, health and living environments, (3) study the associations between natural dimensions of residential environment and BMI trajectories. The SPHC was established in southern Sweden in 2000. Participants (n = 13 581 at baseline, 18–80 years old) responded to four surveys (2000–2016), including sociodemographic, lifestyle and health questions. Residential coordinates were linked to the Scania outdoor Environment Database, which comprised perceived sensory dimensions of residential areas, eight dimensions of the outdoor environment that have previously been identified as important to support people’s health. An adapted version of the Perceived Sensory Dimension Score (PSD3-score) was computed by summing up three dimensions related to the natural environment. Sex-specific BMI trajectories, identified using group-based trajectory modelling, were compared using adjusted multinomial regression. Five BMI trajectories were identified with similar shapes in men and women. Two trajectories started in the normal/overweight categories and were relatively stable over time, while the other three were close to or above the commonly used threshold for obesity. Overall, more favourable socioeconomic and lifestyle factors were observed within non-obese trajectories. The PSD3-score varied geographically across Scania, but for the selected environmental characteristics, little differences were observed in relation to BMI trajectories. For this population, our findings suggest that lifestyle and socioeconomic factors are more important than outdoor environment features for the long-term bodyweight and obesity development. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/032f51d0-83ce-4943-a183-d55f9c26b89c
- author
- Rebouillat, Pauline
LU
; Mattisson, Kristoffer
LU
; Gefenaite, Giedre
LU
; Östergren, Per-Olof
LU
; Nilsson, Peter M
LU
and Björk, Jonas
LU
- organization
-
- Epidemiology and population studies (EPI@Lund) (research group)
- LU Profile Area: Nature-based future solutions
- EpiHealth: Epidemiology for Health
- Research Data Office
- Planetary Health (research group)
- Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Lund University
- Ageing and Health (research group)
- LU Profile Area: Proactive Ageing
- Social Medicine and Global Health (research group)
- Internal Medicine - Epidemiology (research group)
- Infect@LU
- eSSENCE: The e-Science Collaboration
- Centre for Economic Demography
- publishing date
- 2026-04-17
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- BMC Public Health
- volume
- 26
- article number
- 1273
- publisher
- BioMed Central (BMC)
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:105035958955
- pmid:41998602
- ISSN
- 1471-2458
- DOI
- 10.1186/s12889-026-27378-1
- project
- Nature-based solutions at the climate-biodiversity-health nexus
- Sustainable outdoor living environments – systematic interdisciplinary studies of health effects and impact on social inequalities
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 032f51d0-83ce-4943-a183-d55f9c26b89c
- date added to LUP
- 2026-04-18 15:16:39
- date last changed
- 2026-05-18 04:01:15
@article{032f51d0-83ce-4943-a183-d55f9c26b89c,
abstract = {{<br/>Full text links<br/>BMC Public Health<br/><br/>. 2026 Apr 17;26(1):1273.<br/>doi: 10.1186/s12889-026-27378-1.<br/>Individual and environmental determinants of body mass index trajectories: results from a longitudinal study in Southern Sweden<br/>Pauline Rebouillat 1 , Kristoffer Mattisson 2 , Giedre Gefenaite 3 , Per-Olof Östergren 4 , Peter M Nilsson 5 6 , Jonas Björk 2 7<br/>Affiliations<br/><br/> PMID: 41998602 PMCID: PMC13091265 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-026-27378-1 <br/><br/>Abstract<br/><br/>Exposure to natural environments is thought to benefit mental and physical health, but current evidence is mixed, and underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Considering the joint biodiversity, climate, and health crises, a better understanding of the interplay between individuals and their environment is imperative. This study aimed to (1) identify Body Mass Index (BMI) trajectories in the Scania Public Health Cohort (SPHC), (2) characterise trajectories in terms of sociodemographics, lifestyle, health and living environments, (3) study the associations between natural dimensions of residential environment and BMI trajectories. The SPHC was established in southern Sweden in 2000. Participants (n = 13 581 at baseline, 18–80 years old) responded to four surveys (2000–2016), including sociodemographic, lifestyle and health questions. Residential coordinates were linked to the Scania outdoor Environment Database, which comprised perceived sensory dimensions of residential areas, eight dimensions of the outdoor environment that have previously been identified as important to support people’s health. An adapted version of the Perceived Sensory Dimension Score (PSD3-score) was computed by summing up three dimensions related to the natural environment. Sex-specific BMI trajectories, identified using group-based trajectory modelling, were compared using adjusted multinomial regression. Five BMI trajectories were identified with similar shapes in men and women. Two trajectories started in the normal/overweight categories and were relatively stable over time, while the other three were close to or above the commonly used threshold for obesity. Overall, more favourable socioeconomic and lifestyle factors were observed within non-obese trajectories. The PSD3-score varied geographically across Scania, but for the selected environmental characteristics, little differences were observed in relation to BMI trajectories. For this population, our findings suggest that lifestyle and socioeconomic factors are more important than outdoor environment features for the long-term bodyweight and obesity development.}},
author = {{Rebouillat, Pauline and Mattisson, Kristoffer and Gefenaite, Giedre and Östergren, Per-Olof and Nilsson, Peter M and Björk, Jonas}},
issn = {{1471-2458}},
language = {{eng}},
month = {{04}},
publisher = {{BioMed Central (BMC)}},
series = {{BMC Public Health}},
title = {{Individual and environmental determinants of body mass index trajectories : results from a longitudinal study in Southern Sweden}},
url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-026-27378-1}},
doi = {{10.1186/s12889-026-27378-1}},
volume = {{26}},
year = {{2026}},
}