Can walking or biking to work really make a difference? Compact development, observed commuter choice and body mass index.

Wojan, Timothy R./Hamrick, Karen S.
PLoS
Keine Vorschau verfügbar

Datum

2014

item.page.journal-title

item.page.journal-issn

item.page.volume-title

Herausgeber

PLoS

Sprache (Orlis.pc)

DE

Erscheinungsort

Lawrence/Kansas

Sprache

ISSN

ZDB-ID

Standort

Dokumenttyp (zusätzl.)

EDOC

Zusammenfassung

Promoting active commuting is viewed as one strategy to increase physical activity and improve the energy balance of more sedentary individuals thereby improving health outcomes. However, the potential effectiveness of promotion policies may be seriously undermined by the endogenous choice of commute mode. Policy to promote active commuting will be most effective if it can be demonstrated that 1) those in compact cities do not necessarily have a preference for more physical activity, and 2) that current active commuting is not explained by unobserved characteristics that may be the true source of a lower body mass index (BMI). Daily time-use diaries are used in combination with geographical characteristics of where respondents live and work to test 1) whether residents of more compact settlements are characterized by higher activity levels; and 2) whether residents of more compact settlements are more likely to bike or walk to work. An endogenous treatment model of active commuting allows testing whether reductions in BMI associated with walking or biking to work are in fact attributable to that activity or are more strongly associated with unobserved characteristics of these active commuters. The analysis of general activity levels confirms that residents of more compact cities do not expend more energy than residents of more sprawling cities, indicating that those in compact cities do not necessarily have a preference for more physical activity. The endogenous treatment model is consistent with walking or biking to work having an independent effect on BMI, as unobserved factors that contribute to a higher likelihood of active commuting are not associated with lower BMI.

item.page.description

Schlagwörter

Zeitschrift

PLoS one

Ausgabe

e0130903

Erscheinungsvermerk/Umfang

Seiten

20 S.

Zitierform

Stichwörter

Serie/Report Nr.

Sammlungen