March 18 - Urban Planning a Factor in Rising Obesity Rates
You may want to buy healthy food for your family,
but if the good grocery stores are far away and pricey and the
fast-food outlets are cheap and plentiful, it may be harder
to make the healthy choice. Research led by the University of
Alberta and funded by the Canadian Institute for Health Information
confirms there are links between our urban surroundings and
how likely we are to struggle with obesity.
The startling rise in obesity rates in North
America over the past two decades has led to calls for more
effective approaches to help people achieve healthy weights.
The State of the Evidence Review on Urban Health and Healthy
Weights, released to the public this week, synthesizes the findings
of hundreds of population health studies published over the
years and shines a spotlight on aspects of our urban environments
that can either inhibit or promote our ability to maintain a
healthy weight.
“Two key areas we looked at were economic
environments and built environments—meaning the ways in
which the neighbourhoods and the cities in which we live are
planned and developed,” says Kim Raine, director of the
University of Alberta’s Centre for Health Promotion Studies
and lead author of the report.
“When we reviewed the evidence we found,
for example, that lower-income neighbourhoods were more likely
to have greater access to sources of high-calorie foods, such
as fast-food outlets, and lower access to supermarkets or other
stores stocking healthy foods,” explains Raine. The report
also found that a lower socio-economic status—which involves
education level, income and employment—was often associated
with increased obesity among both adults and children. “Lower
personal income affects the affordability of food,” Raine
says, “and that has been shown to have the most consistent
influence on what people eat.”
The walkability of neighbourhoods and access
to recreational facilities in and around neighbourhoods may
also assist in promoting healthy weights, according to the report.
“Some hallmarks of walkability are increased residential
density, mixed-use zoning and street connectivity,” says
coauthor John Spence from the University of Alberta’s
Faculty of Physical Education and Recreation. “Conversely,
factors such as urban sprawl, low intersection density, low
residential density and low land-use mix tend also to favour
sedentary behaviour and lower physical activity levels and promote
obesity.”
The report also found that individuals living
in middle-income to high-income neighbourhoods were more likely
to be physically active than their counterparts in lower-income
neighbourhoods.
Raine, Spence, and their fellow researchers
conclude that interventions aimed at improving the income and
educational status of individuals and families within urban
environments may help address these disparities in obesity.
“And improving access to healthy foods and recreation
opportunities in lower-income neighbourhoods can also help to
create a ‘healthy weight’-friendly environment,”
Spence says.
Source: University of Alberta
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