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Journal Article

Citation

Sugiyama T, Kubota A, Sugiyama M, Cole R, Owen N. J. Transp. Health 2019; 15: e100621.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jth.2019.100621

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Introduction
Neighborhood environmental attributes can influence health-related physical activity, particularly walking. A better understanding of the distances adults walk to local destinations is needed to identify the appropriate geospatial boundaries within which environmental attributes are measured (buffer sizes). This study sought to identify the distances adults of different ages walk to/from public transit (PT) stops, shops/services, and natural features.
Methods
Data from the 2009-12 South-East Queensland Travel Survey were used. Our sample consisted of 2105 adults (18-84 years) who reported at least one home-based walking trip to/from those destinations. We reported the median (with the 20th and 80th percentiles) distances walked to/from each destination category by age groups. Multilevel regression analyses examined whether the distances walked differed by age groups.
Results
Participants reported 4029 walking trips, with the median distance of 0.68 km and the 80th percentile of 1.35 km. The median walking distance (80th percentile) to/from utilitarian destinations (PT stops, shops/services) and natural features was 0.63 (1.16) km and 1.15 (2.27) km, respectively. The overall median walking distance by age groups was 0.62 km for the younger (18-34 years), 0.67 km for younger middle (35-49 years), 0.79 km for older middle (50-64 years) and 0.72 km for older (65-84 years) groups. Regression analyses found that older middle-aged adults walked significantly longer overall and to/from utilitarian destinations than any of the other age groups.
Conclusions
Our findings support buffer sizes around 600-1200 m for studies examining environmental correlates of walking for utilitarian purposes. For recreational walking to get to natural features, larger buffer sizes ranging from 1200 to over 2000 m may be suitable. We did not find consistent evidence supporting the use of different buffer sizes for different age groups.


Language: en

Keywords

Age differences; Local destinations; Physical activity; Travel survey

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