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A Longitudinal Analysis of the Influence of the Neighborhood Environment on Recreational Walking within the Neighborhood: Results from RESIDE

There is limited longitudinal evidence confirming the role of neighborhood environment attributes in encouraging people to walk more or if active people simply choose to live in activity-friendly neighborhoods. Natural experiments of policy changes to create more walkable communities provide stronge...

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Published in:Environmental health perspectives 2017-07, Vol.125 (7), p.077009-077009
Main Authors: Christian, Hayley, Knuiman, Matthew, Divitini, Mark, Foster, Sarah, Hooper, Paula, Boruff, Bryan, Bull, Fiona, Giles-Corti, Billie
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c692t-e46657579f93268308373c106773ebae98391cc753b4542b3ece187a345464703
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container_title Environmental health perspectives
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description There is limited longitudinal evidence confirming the role of neighborhood environment attributes in encouraging people to walk more or if active people simply choose to live in activity-friendly neighborhoods. Natural experiments of policy changes to create more walkable communities provide stronger evidence for a causal effect of neighborhood environments on residents' walking. We aimed to investigate longitudinal associations between objective and perceived neighborhood environment measures and neighborhood recreational walking. We analyzed longitudinal data collected over 8 yr (four surveys) from the RESIDential Environments (RESIDE) Study (Perth, Australia, 2003-2012). At each time point, participants reported the frequency and total minutes of recreational walking/week within their neighborhood and neighborhood environment perceptions. Objective measures of the neighborhood environment were generated using a Geographic Information System (GIS). Local recreational walking was influenced by objectively measured access to a medium-/large-size park, beach access, and higher street connectivity, which was reduced when adjusted for neighborhood perceptions. In adjusted models, positive perceptions of access to a park and beach, higher street connectivity, neighborhood esthetics, and safety from crime were independent determinants of increased neighborhood recreational walking. Local recreational walking increased by 9 min/wk (12% increase in frequency) for each additional perceived neighborhood attribute present. Our findings provide urban planners and policy makers with stronger causal evidence of the positive impact of well-connected neighborhoods and access to local parks of varying sizes on local residents' recreational walking and health. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP823.
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source GreenFILE; ABI/INFORM Global; Publicly Available Content (ProQuest); PubMed Central
subjects Adult
Australia
Beaches
Built environment
Climate change
Connectivity
Crime
Data processing
Environmental aspects
Environmental effects
Exercise
Female
Geographic information systems
Health aspects
Health care
Humans
Infrastructure
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Middle Aged
Neighborhoods
Outdoor recreation
Parks & recreation areas
Planned communities
Public health
Public transportation
Questionnaires
Recreation - psychology
Remote sensing
Residence Characteristics - statistics & numerical data
Satellite navigation systems
Socioeconomic factors
Standard scores
Studies
Sustainable development
Traffic congestion
Traffic safety
Urban development
Walking
Walking - psychology
Western Australia
Workforce
title A Longitudinal Analysis of the Influence of the Neighborhood Environment on Recreational Walking within the Neighborhood: Results from RESIDE
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