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. 2012 Apr;89(2):270-84.
doi: 10.1007/s11524-011-9652-8.

Complexity in built environment, health, and destination walking: a neighborhood-scale analysis

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Complexity in built environment, health, and destination walking: a neighborhood-scale analysis

Cynthia Carlson et al. J Urban Health. 2012 Apr.

Abstract

This study investigates the relationships between the built environment, the physical attributes of the neighborhood, and the residents' perceptions of those attributes. It focuses on destination walking and self-reported health, and does so at the neighborhood scale. The built environment, in particular sidewalks, road connectivity, and proximity of local destinations, correlates with destination walking, and similarly destination walking correlates with physical health. It was found, however, that the built environment and health metrics may not be simply, directly correlated but rather may be correlated through a series of feedback loops that may regulate risk in different ways in different contexts. In particular, evidence for a feedback loop between physical health and destination walking is observed, as well as separate feedback loops between destination walking and objective metrics of the built environment, and destination walking and perception of the built environment. These feedback loops affect the ability to observe how the built environment correlates with residents' physical health. Previous studies have investigated pieces of these associations, but are potentially missing the more complex relationships present. This study proposes a conceptual model describing complex feedback relationships between destination walking and public health, with the built environment expected to increase or decrease the strength of the feedback loop. Evidence supporting these feedback relationships is presented.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Potential pathway for built environment to influence physical health; linear relationship, with built environment influencing transportation, which impacts health.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Potential pathway for built environment to influence physical health; positive feedback loop with accelerating or decelerating influences, annotated with a sample of the available literature for each interaction.

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