Thursday, January 30, 2025
spot_img

Use of public transport may lower obesity rate

Date:

Share post:

spot_img
spot_img

A new study now A new study now  shows that public  transportation systems not only provide numerous economic benefits for a community, but may also be instrumental in lowering obesity rates.The study, by researchers from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Georgia Tech, compared and analysed data from 2001 and 2009. The results of the study were published in the journal Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice.The study found that a single percentage-point increase in mass transit ridership is associated with a 0.473 percentage-point lower obesity rate in counties across the United States.Speaking about the study, co-author Sheldon H. Jacobson said, “Opting for mass transit over driving creates opportunities for exercise that may otherwise not exist.”According to the researcher, instead of just stepping out of the house and getting into a car, public transportation prompts people to walk from their home to a bus stop and from there to the destination.The study details a computational analysis of publicly available health, transportation, and census data across 227 counties from 45 states in 2001 and 2009.The analysis included differences in economic and lifestyle factors including leisure-time exercise, household income, health care coverage, and public transit funding.The new analysis is consistent with previous work by the researchers which found that each percentage-point increase in a country’s public transit use was associated with 0.221 percentage-point lower obesity rate.Speaking about the study, co-author Douglas M. King said the new work took a longitudinal approach, meaning they examined differences between 2001 and 2009, allowing them to better control factors that could otherwise influence the analysis.The researchers note that while the two studies differ in magnitude, they do not differ in a statistically significant way. However, both studies suggest that increasing public transit usage is associated with a reduction in a country’s obesity rate.While Jacobson admitted that because the analysis was done at the country level, its implications for an average person was not clear, he went on to add that the results indicate that when more people opt to use public transit, the county-level obesity rate tends to drop. However, he added that it does not necessarily imply that any one particular person is less likely to be obese if they ride transit frequently.This study focuses on data collected in 2001 and 2009, when rail and bus were the primary modes of public transportation in the United States. (ANI)

spot_img
spot_img

Related articles

’Turned capital into a dump’: Swati Maliwal calls out Kejriwal over Delhi’s garbage crisis

New Delhi, Jan 30: Rajya Sabha member Swati Maliwal on Thursday criticised former Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal,...

SC bars CTET and TET qualified candidates from other states in Jharkhand teacher recruitment exam

New Delhi/Ranchi, Jan 30: The Supreme Court on Thursday overturned a Jharkhand High Court ruling to hold that...

Community-led conservation key for survival of migratory species: UN reports

Bonn, Jan 30: Community-led conservation strategies can be instrumental for the successful conservation of migratory species, two major...

Will make proposals based on NE’s socio-economic & geographical situations: Arvind Panagariya

Agartala, Jan 30:  The 16th Finance Commission while making its recommendations would keep in mind the socio-economic and...