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Release Date: Aug. 28, 2003
MORE SPRAWL MEANS
MORE WEIGHT AND LESS WALKING
By Becky Ham, Science Writer Health Behavior News Service
Residents of sprawling counties weigh more, walk less in their leisure time
and have higher rates of high blood pressure compared with those in more “compact” counties,
a new study finds.
Reid Ewing, Ph.D., of the National Center for Smart Growth and colleagues
say more evidence is needed to pinpoint sprawl as the direct cause of these
poor health outcomes. But their findings, appearing in the September/October
issue of the American Journal of Health Promotion, suggest a significant association
between the form of an urban environment and certain health conditions and
behaviors.
When the researchers accounted for differences in age, education and other
personal variables, they found that residents of the most compact counties
walked 79 minutes more of leisure time per month and weighed about six pounds
less than residents of the most sprawling counties.
Ewing and colleagues analyzed health data from more than 200,000 people living
in 448 counties and 83 metropolitan areas. Each area was graded on its level
of sprawl, using factors like the density of its residential neighborhoods,
physical separation of homes, shops and workplaces, and connections between
roads.
“Poor accessibility is the common denominator of urban sprawl -- nothing
is within easy walking distance of anything else,” Ewing and colleagues
say.
Some of the most compact or least sprawled counties are the New York City
boroughs, San Francisco County and Hudson County in New Jersey. Counties with
the highest levels of sprawl include Goochland Country in the Richmond, Va.,
area and Geauga County near Cleveland, Ohio. [A complete list of counties and
their respective sprawl scores is available from the researchers.]
Future studies that include information on other types of physical activity,
such as walks to work or shopping, should help clarify the relationship of
sprawl and health, the researchers say.
More precise measurements of sprawl are also needed, according to the researchers.
“It might be that certain thresholds or critical levels of ‘compactness’ are
needed before community design begins to have a palatable influence on physical
activity,” they explain.
In any case, the health consequences of sprawl could be severe, say the researchers,
who note that excess weight and physical inactivity may account for more than
300,000 premature deaths each year.
# # #
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Interviews: Contact Reid Ewing at REwing6269@aol.com.
American Journal of Health Promotion: Call (248) 682-0707 or visit www.healthpromotionjournal.com.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Director of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
press@cfah.org
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