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Highlighting the Problem of Suburbia - Printable Version

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- The Jays - 05-31-2004

Quote:Study: Driving longer means larger waistlines
Researchers examine link between the environment and obesity

The Associated Press
ATLANTA - Spending more time behind the wheel — and less time on two feet — is adding inches to waistlines and contributing to the nation’s obesity epidemic, a new study concludes.


The survey of 10,500 metro Atlanta residents found that for every extra 30 minutes commuters drove each day, they had a 3 percent greater chance of being obese than their peers who drove less.

The survey also found that people who lived within walking distance of shops — less than a half mile — were 7 percent less likely to be obese than their counterparts who had to drive.

“The more driving you do means you’re going to weigh more — the more walking means you’re going to weigh less,” said Lawrence Frank, associate professor at the University of British Columbia who oversaw the study when he worked at Georgia Tech.

That much seems obvious, but researchers were surprised to discover that how much time a person spent driving had a greater impact on whether a person was obese than other factors such as income, education, gender or ethnicity.

About 91 percent of the people surveyed said they didn’t walk to destinations. Many spent more than an hour each day in their cars.


Examining environment and obesity
The study is one of the first to look at the link between the environment and obesity, said Kelly Brownell, chairman of Yale University’s psychology department and director of its Center for Eating and Weight Disorders.

“Studies of this type are very important because they show factors in our environment that can either help or hurt our waistline,” said Brownell, who was not involved in the study. “These results show that the environment, affecting our physical activity, is quite influential.”

In the study, which is expected to appear in the June issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, researchers tracked participants’ travel behavior and measured their height and weight from 2000 to 2002.

The study focused on Atlanta, but Frank said the city is not alone.

“Most regions look very similar to Atlanta — anything that’s built after World War II is pretty much auto-oriented,” he said. “We need to start to look at the way we’re designing our communities ... the collective impact of having to drive everywhere is becoming really large.”

Suburban, white men typically weighed about 10 pounds more than men who lived in dense urban areas with shops and services, according to the study, which will be presented Thursday at a national obesity conference in Virginia.
The study was paid for by $4 million in grants from the Georgia Department of Transportation, Georgia Regional Transportation Authority and the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The Atlanta Regional Commission and the Environmental Protection Agency also participated.


This shit isn't news. The fact is that suburban living is not the ideal way of living. When you have to drive to a park, or to get a gallon of milk, or spend hundreds of hours a year driving to work and back, there is a problem there.

Human beings have legs and feet. They are used to walk. It's much easier, and better for not just your health but on your gasoline usage, to walk to a store that's within 500 yards of your location. Unfortunatly, our goverments, both local and federal, and our town designers, planners, and agencies, have failed to act on this, and have let everyone become reliant on automobile transportation for everything.

It's a part of culture, which is the crux of the problem. People look at you like you have lobsters crawling out of your ears when you say you're gonna walk somewhere. The idea of a bike path seems foreign to them. When a person from Manhattan tells someone round my neighborhood that they have never owned a car, they think that person must be fucking amish or something.

But it is our culture's increased desire to do less, do it faster, and conception that oil supplies are endless that will continue this destruction.

Fast food companies aren't to blame for obesity. It's the fact that people live a mile or two away from local businesses that contributes to obesity. This is one of the major mistakes of the 20th century, and I don't know how long it's gonna take to fix.


- Galt - 05-31-2004

that's why New York city rules!


- The Jays - 05-31-2004

exactly.


- GonzoStyle - 06-01-2004

I hop into my motorized scooter to go get my bagel in the morning, I dont mean outside though, I drive it from my bed to the kitchen, walking is for pussy boy faggots with in shap bodies and low cholestorol.


- diceisgod - 06-01-2004

Elevators are for pussies! Just jump out the window!


- The Sleeper - 06-01-2004

I agree 100% with the initial post.


- GonzoStyle - 06-01-2004

I agree 100% with DIG's post, then again I always agree with DIG.