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Study
Links Obesity, Urban Sprawl
Is suburban life making people overweight? Or could it be that
overweight people tend to choose the suburban life?
In a study recently published in the Journal of Regional Science,
researchers from Oregon State University found that the relationship
between obesity and urban sprawl may be a two-way street.
Economists Andrew Plantinga from OSU's Department of Agricultural
and Resource Economics and Stephanie Bernell from OSU's Department
of Public Health expanded previous studies that showed that people
living in areas of urban sprawl tend to have higher body mass
indices. Their analysis suggests that the relationship between
obesity and urban sprawl may be due to personal preferences when
choosing a home location rather than to direct impacts of the
suburban environment on physical activity and weight.
Location, location, location. Research by Plantinga and Bernell
suggests that an individual's body weight is a factor determining
the desirability of a residential location. They found the relationship
between obesity and urban sprawl can be explained by the way people
sort themselves by personal preference.
In a follow-up study, Plantinga and Bernell used a national
data set to test whether body mass index influences the decisions
of adults to locate in counties with a high or low degree of sprawl.
To measure body weight, the researchers used data from the U.S.
Department of Labor's National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, which
has tracked statistics on thousands of individuals since their
youth in 1979. The researchers examined many factors, among them
ethnicity, gender, age, income, education, marital status and
body weight.
"Among people who moved recently, we find that in addition to
a high body mass index, being female, younger, and married increases
the probability of choosing to reside in a sprawling county,"
Bernell said.
"In many sprawling areas, distances are too great for people
to walk to work or to the store," Plantinga explained. "Transportation
infrastructure is often designed for automobiles, with the result
that walking and bicycling are impractical and unsafe. The incentives
are for people to drive instead of walk. In contrast, in urban
neighborhoods like the Pearl District in Portland, Ore., people
can walk to work, school, or shopping. In many cases, it's easier
to walk to the store than to drive."
Previous studies had suggested that the relationship between
obesity and urban sprawl is related to suburban environments that
discourage routine physical activity such as walking and biking.
However, previous studies did not consider the choices people
make in selecting where to live.
"When you select a residential location, you are really choosing
a bundle of attributes," Plantinga said. "The house you choose
may be near a shopping center or a park, or it may have a three-car
garage and a bonus room. The market prices each of these attributes.
It follows that individuals, given their income, will choose locations
that provide the attributes of greatest value to them. People
who value walking will tend to choose walkable neighborhoods.
People who do not care for walking will tend not to."
These findings have implications for urban planners and public
health officials, according to Plantinga. Many recent planning
initiatives include funding for bicycle and pedestrian facilities
in order to increase physical activity. However, making communities
more exercise-friendly may simply attract people who are predisposed
to physical activity.
Reference
Source 125
September
19, 2005
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