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Journal Article

Citation

Smart MJ. J. Transp. Health 2018; 8: 193-201.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jth.2017.12.012

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Researchers and advocates have increasingly drawn connections between individuals' transportation choices and healthy body weight, and most have found a connection. This paper improves on prior research by using panel data spanning 1999 to 2013 from the nationally (U.S.) representative Panel Study of Income Dynamics (N = 23,605 observations of 4870 individuals) to assess the connection between Body Mass Index (BMI) and transit availability, the use of transit, residential density, and neighborhood walkability. I further assess whether those who move to transit-richer, denser, or more walkable neighborhoods see systematic changes in body weight over time. The model results suggest that changes in one's transportation environment and travel behavior may be associated with reductions in BMI; for example, for the average-height man (5'11", 1.75 m), moving from the worst to best transit environment is associated with a reduction in body mass of nearly five pounds (2.2kg), and moving from the worst to best pedestrian environment with a reduction in body mass of about two pounds (<1kg). The largest effect is seen in the panel model, in which giving up one's car correlates with a nearly seven-pound (over 3kg) reduction in body mass after six years.

Keywords

BMI; Panel data; Transit; Walk Score; Walkability

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