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Geography 3432 Environment and Health. The Built Environment and Health (Frank et al. Chapters 1 and 3). Discussion Frank et al. Model Physical activity and health Suburbanization and design. Discussion. How does the built environment effect health?
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Geography 3432Environment and Health The Built Environment and Health(Frank et al. Chapters 1 and 3) • Discussion • Frank et al. Model • Physical activity and health • Suburbanization and design Geog 3432
Discussion • How does the built environment effect health? • What specifically is the focus of Frank et al.? Geog 3432
Frank et al.’s Framework: Geog 3432
Elaboration of Framework • Built environment – where we live and work • Public health – outcomes, e.g., obesity, heart disease, stress • Activity patterns – esp. walking bicycling • Land use – e.g., proximity home, work school • Design – small scale features that influence how people feel about an urban “environment” • Transportation systems – esp. for walking, biking, driving, public transit Geog 3432
Health Patterns • “Premature” death (e.g. cardiovascular disease) and disability (e.g., osteoporosis) from preventable diseases • Obesity increasing • risk factor for all sorts of illness/disease • Many health risks decrease with increased physical activity Geog 3432
Causes of Death • note the causes that disappear in later period Geog 3432
Obesity Overweight • 1 category above normal Body Mass Index (based on height:weight ratio) Obese • 2 categories above Prevalence • 1999-2000 CDC study – US 31% obese, 34% overweight = 65% above “normal” Geog 3432
Obesity Patterns • increasing over time Causes of “Obesity” • diet • activity Geog 3432
20 Minute Workout? • 80s – early 90s 20 minutes vigorous exercise • 1996 US Surgeon General report • 30 minutes of moderate activity on most days 1980s aerobics tv show “The 20 Minute Workout” Geog 3432
Moderate Activity Benefits • Muscle strength • Blood pressure • e.g., Reduction risk coronary heart disease on par with stopping smoking! • Depression and anxiety • Obesity • Skeletal development of kids • Bone density adults • Independence (esp. elderly) Geog 3432
Guideline: Active • moderate-intensity physical activity for at least 30 minutes on 5 or more days of the week or OR • vigorous-intensity physical activity 3 or more days of the week for 20 or more minutes Geog 3432
Sedentary Reap New Benefits Quickest Geog 3432
Modifiable Behaviours and Mortality Geog 3432
Improve How Much? • If half “sedentary” population became irregularly active (not quite guideline) total # deaths drop by: • CHD 3.9% • Colon cancer 2.5% • Diabetes 1.5% • If same population met activity guidelines: • CHD drop 7.1% • Colon cancer drop 7.4% • Diabetes 5.2% Geog 3432
Genetics or physical activity • Maybe premature death/disability is mostly genetic? Geog 3432
Genetics or physical activity Geog 3432
Discussion • What explains low physical activity in North America? Geog 3432
Interconnected Causes of Sedentary Lifestyles • Behavioural • “victim blaming” • choice available, e.g., transportation • Suburbanization • landuse • design • Time • what happened to the 35hr work week? • Wealth • very much so Geog 3432
Physical Activity and Wealth Geog 3432
Is suburbanization bad for your health? Garden Cities • started late 1800s • reaction to overcrowded and dirty large cities • access to nature (healthy) • best aspects of rural and urban living Geog 3432
Garden Cities vs Industrial Cities Philadelphia first half 20th C (Source) Hagerstown, MD 2010 (Source) Other Examples of Cities/Suburbs Inspired by the Garden City Movement • Shaker Heights, Ohio • Kapuskasing, Ontario Geog 3432
Full Circle • Olmstead – designer (Central Park), architect, writer • advocate for residential outside CBD – space, greenery • CBD too crowed, stressful and generally unhealthy • Levittown NY and PA – post war American (and Canadian) dream • first “suburbs” – entire communities • traffic calming Geog 3432
Transportation: Modal “Choice” Geog 3432
Transportation:Children and Modal Choice Geog 3432
Transportation:Children and Modal Choice Geog 3432
What’s the Epidemiologic Evidence? • Many studies show significant but weak relationships between measures like “sprawl”, “walkability” etc. and “activity”, “overweight/obese”, “depression”, “alcohol abuse” (Renalds et al. 2010 A systematic review of built environment and health, Family and Community Health, 33(1): 68-78) • most use ecologic or case-control study design (what does this imply?) Geog 3432
Discussion • How can we increase physical activity (not personally per se, but as a public health problem)? Geog 3432
Design Barriers Geog 3432
Design Barriers Geog 3432
Designing for Pedestrians Geog 3432
Exercise/Conclusion • Do we need to sacrafice the American/Canadian dream to achieve walkable/cyclable cities? Geog 3432