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Urban Sprawl Makes Americans Fat, Study Finds (wtf? alert)
Yahoo! News ^ | August 28, 2003 | Maggie Fox

Posted on 08/28/2003 8:11:38 PM PDT by El Conservador

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - You drive to work, you drive your kids to school, you drive to the grocery store -- no wonder you have put on a few pounds.

U.S. researchers said on Thursday they had quantified the price of living in sprawled-out American communities and weight gain leads the list -- six pounds on average, to be precise.

Their findings, published in special issues of the American Journal of Public Health and the American Journal of Health Promotion, are aimed at urban planners, county and city councils and other groups involved in laying out communities.

"We found that U.S. adults living in sprawling counties weigh more, are more likely to be obese and are more likely to suffer from high blood pressure than are their counterparts in compact counties," Reid Ewing of the National Center for Smart Growth at the University of Maryland told reporters.

He said two-thirds of the U.S. population lives in counties covered in his group's survey.

Unlike people in old-fashioned urban centers who can walk to work, shops, and public transport, those in the spread-out communities cannot walk even if they wanted to because sidewalks and crossings are lacking and homes, schools and workplaces are far apart.

"For some people it is a 'duh' kind of issue, but it doesn't seem to be for a lot of people in important positions," Ewing said.

He said the research can be used to persuade policymakers to change zoning, funding and even lending laws to promote development that will encourage people to walk.

"If we go to a city council and say 'allowing this sprawling development ... is maybe going to hurt people's health through obesity', they are going to say 'prove it'," Ewing said.

LESS EXPENSIVE, CLEANER, MORE PLEASANT

More compact communities are less expensive -- with sprawl bringing 10 percent greater annual public service deficits and 8 percent higher housing costs, the researchers said.

Dense communities also ease pollution and allow for better social interaction, they said.

The researchers looked at U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (news - web sites) data on more than 200,000 people living in 448 U.S. counties in major metropolitan areas. They assessed sprawl in each county using U.S. Census Bureau (news - web sites) and other federal data.

"The average adult would be expected to weigh about six pounds (2.7 kg) more living in the most sprawling county in our sample as opposed to an adult the same age living in the most compact county," Ewing said.

The study found that people in far-flung communities walk less for leisure, but this factor did not account for all the weight difference.

"It may be as a result of the lower level of physical activity they get as part of their daily lives -- driving to work, driving to school, driving to lunch, basically driving everywhere," Ewing said.

People in such communities may drive for good reasons.

Another set of studies found that U.S. pedestrians and cyclists were much more likely to be killed or injured than Dutch and German pedestrians and cyclists.

Whether compared on a per-trip basis or by distance traveled, U.S. cyclists were three times more likely to be killed than German cyclists and six times more likely to die than Dutch cyclists, the study found.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: health; suburbia; suburbs; urbansprawl
Can somebody explain this???

Living in the suburbs make you fat???

Well, then I'll move to the decaying, unsafe inner city to lose weight!!!

1 posted on 08/28/2003 8:11:38 PM PDT by El Conservador
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To: El Conservador
Makes sense to me. We suburbanites tend to drive everywhere at the expense of walking. Inactivity contributes to obesity.
2 posted on 08/28/2003 8:17:25 PM PDT by Think free or die
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To: El Conservador
Perhaps sprawl does make one fat.

I know for a fact that living in urban concentrations in coastal areas tends to make one stupid, lazy and prone to Marxian delusions.

Of course, superior minds can resist but its got to be a tough place to live...
3 posted on 08/28/2003 8:23:21 PM PDT by WorkingClassFilth (Defund NPR, PBS and the LSC.)
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To: El Conservador
Can somebody explain this???

It's found in the article:

Unlike people in old-fashioned urban centers who can walk to work, shops, and public transport, those in the spread-out communities cannot walk even if they wanted to because sidewalks and crossings are lacking and homes, schools and workplaces are far apart.

4 posted on 08/28/2003 8:24:02 PM PDT by Salsa
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To: Salsa
It was a rhetorical question; I already knew that!!!

I asked that just to spur debate!!!

Lighten up!!!
5 posted on 08/28/2003 8:28:48 PM PDT by El Conservador ("No blood for oil!"... Then don't drive, you moron!!!)
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To: Salsa
"We found that U.S. adults living in sprawling counties weigh more, are more likely to be obese and are more likely to suffer from high blood pressure than are their counterparts in compact counties,"

It's found in the article.

Like, you really gave this study some thought?

We are not "compact" enough.

There you have it, Salsa.

If my work location was not 22 miles from my house, I might walk - or ride a bike.

The fact that my almighty SUV has this neat little invention called, "Air Conditioning", also has a part to play here. This is the desert. From about May to late Sept we get real coxy with the triple digits on the thermometer.

I know, I know - it's a "dry" heat. You walk a mile here when it's 115 degrees. Mean time, I'll hop in my A/C equipped SUV and drive two blocks to the local 7-11 for some beer.

I do get exercise, though. The concrete is so hot that I have to run - from my patio to my pool.

Another, in a long line, of profound "studies" - that are not worth the cost of what they are printed on.

The best part is that we get to pay for these Einstein like revelations.

As I've said before, whats next? A study that lets us know they found a dircect correlation between the presence of the Sun and day light?

/rant off.

LVM

6 posted on 08/28/2003 9:05:05 PM PDT by LasVegasMac (Those that live by the sword get shot by those that don't.)
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To: Think free or die
I'm always amused at the shoppers trying to park in the WalMart or Costco parking lots. They'll wait an inordinate length of time for someone to back out of a space close to the front door, rather than park a hundred feet further and have to walk for 30 seconds.

The majority of Americans are simply lazy, which is one reason that the majority of Americans are overweight.

7 posted on 08/28/2003 9:12:28 PM PDT by JoeFromCA
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To: El Conservador
Zoning caused sprawl - it's the unintended consequence of GOVERNMENT deciding we should have commercial (stores) separate from residential (homes). Even as they talk about tinkering with zoning to allow mixed use, they still aren't able to let the market decide. Pre-zoning communities allowed businesses to be located on the ground floor of multi-floor buildings, in peoples homes, pretty much anywhere the entrepreneur thought they could make it. Today we have 'professional planners' to tell us (without any research except their college classes) what kind of business belongs in the designated commercial zoning. I personally don't see any planners that have the prescience to see into the future and know what we will want next year, let alone in 20.

Besides, obesity is the result of the "Food Pyramid", written by the PETA sympathisers to steer us to all grains and sugars as long as there's few 'animal products' (meat, fats). Sugar and Corn Syrup, cheap, readily available and in EVERYTHING make us fat.
8 posted on 08/28/2003 9:16:05 PM PDT by Kay Ludlow
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To: Think free or die
During occasional trips to Monterrey, Mexico, I'm always impressed with the fact that the locals seem to generally be in good physical shape. Workers arrive at their jobs after walking to/from the subway station or bus stop, and motorists share the roads with bicyling commuters. A new car costs at least twice as much to buy in Mexico, and so many folks simply make do without (helped no doubt by 35-cent bus and subway fares).

The pollution and traffic safety aspects of their lifestyle may not be ideal, but I wouldn't be surprised if the incidence of health problems related to inactivity were considerably less down there.

9 posted on 08/28/2003 9:31:45 PM PDT by Skibane
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To: El Conservador
The parents of the fat kids in suberbia aren't making their kids work. Too much video games, chips, and soda-pop. That explains it. Make them kids get off their a**es.
10 posted on 08/28/2003 10:05:57 PM PDT by vpintheak (Our Liberties we prize, and our rights we will maintain!)
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To: El Conservador
JOHN EDWARDS ALERT! The trial lawyers need to sue urban sprawl.
11 posted on 08/28/2003 10:09:58 PM PDT by Malesherbes
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To: El Conservador
I wonder just how much this important study cost taxpayers? It's just a safe bet that taxpayers funded this BS research.
12 posted on 08/28/2003 10:16:16 PM PDT by boycott
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