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Get Free AccessReported Relationships: J.F. Sallis:Royalty; SPARK Programs of School Specialty Inc. Intellectual Property; SPARK Programs of School Specialty Inc. Contracted Research - Including Principle Investigator; Nike, Inc. Ownership Interest; Santech Inc. PURPOSE: Creating “activity-friendly environments” is a recommended strategy to increase physical activity, but the potential co-benefits are unclear. Purpose is to explore a wide range of literature to understand the co-benefits of activity-friendly environments. METHODS: An extensive but non-systematic search of scientific and “gray” literature was conducted. Five physical activity settings were defined: parks/trails, urban design, transportation, schools, and workplaces/buildings. Several evidence-based activity-friendly features were identified for each setting. Six potential co-benefits were searched: physical health, mental health, social health, safety/injury prevention, environmental sustainability, and economics. Over 200 sources were located, and 418 higher-quality findings were summarized with semi-quantitative scores based on direction of associations and quality of the source. RESULTS: When findings were summarized for each setting, 22 of 30 setting by outcome combinations showed “strong” evidence of co-benefits. Each setting had strong evidence of at least three co-benefits, with only one occurrence of a net negative effect. All settings showed the potential to be designed so they would contribute to environmental sustainability and economic benefits. Parks/trails had strong evidence for all 6 co-benefits, and urban planning had strong evidence for 5 co-benefits. CONCLUSION: The exploration of literature revealed substantial evidence that designing environments that make physical activity attractive and convenient is likely to produce multiple important benefits beyond physical activity.
James Sallis, Chad Spoon, Nick Cavill, Jessa K. Engelberg, Klaus Gebel, Debbie Lou, Mike Parker, Christina M. Thornton, Amanda L. Wilson, Carmen L. Cutter, Ding Ding (2015). Evidence Of Co-benefits Of Designing Communities For Active Living. Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 47(5S), pp. 394-394, DOI: 10.1249/01.mss.0000477505.22275.ad.
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Type
Article
Year
2015
Authors
11
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise
DOI
10.1249/01.mss.0000477505.22275.ad
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