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Urban
Sprawl Makes Us Fat
Excerpt
By Maggie Fox, Reuters Health
You
drive to work, you drive your kids to school, you drive to the
grocery store -- no wonder you have put on a few pounds.
U.S. researchers said on Thursday
they had quantified the price of living in sprawled-out communities
and weight gain leads the list -- six pounds on average, to be
precise.
Their findings, published in special
issues of the American Journal of Public Health and the American
Journal of Health Promotion, are aimed at urban planners, county
and city councils and other groups involved in laying out communities.
"We found that U.S. adults living
in sprawling counties weigh more, are more likely to be obese
and are more likely to suffer from high blood pressure than are
their counterparts in compact counties," Reid Ewing of the National
Center for Smart Growth at the University of Maryland told reporters.
He said two-thirds of the U.S.
population lives in counties covered in his group's survey.
Unlike people in old-fashioned
urban centers who can walk to work, shops, and public transport,
those in the spread-out communities cannot walk even if they wanted
to because sidewalks and crossings are lacking and homes, schools
and workplaces are far apart.
"For some people it is a 'duh'
kind of issue, but it doesn't seem to be for a lot of people in
important positions," Ewing said.
He said the research can be used
to persuade policymakers to change zoning, funding and even lending
laws to promote development that will encourage people to walk.
"If we go to a city council and
say 'allowing this sprawling development ... is maybe going to
hurt people's health through obesity', they are going to say 'prove
it'," Ewing said.
LESS EXPENSIVE, CLEANER, MORE PLEASANT
More compact communities are less
expensive -- with sprawl bringing 10 percent greater annual public
service deficits and 8 percent higher housing costs, the researchers
said.
Dense communities also ease pollution
and allow for better social interaction, they said.
The researchers looked at U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data on more than 200,000
people living in 448 U.S. counties in major metropolitan areas.
They assessed sprawl in each county using U.S. Census Bureau and
other federal data.
"The average adult would be expected
to weigh about six pounds (2.7 kg) more living in the most sprawling
county in our sample as opposed to an adult the same age living
in the most compact county," Ewing said.
The study found that people in
far-flung communities walk less for leisure, but this factor did
not account for all the weight difference.
"It may be as a result of the lower
level of physical activity they get as part of their daily lives
-- driving to work, driving to school, driving to lunch, basically
driving everywhere," Ewing said.
People in such communities may
drive for good reasons.
Another set of studies found that
U.S. pedestrians and cyclists were much more likely to be killed
or injured than Dutch and German pedestrians and cyclists.
Whether compared on a per-trip
basis or by distance traveled, U.S. cyclists were three times
more likely to be killed than German cyclists and six times more
likely to die than Dutch cyclists, the study found.
Reference
Source 89
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