Abstract

Park use is associated with health, yet our understanding of park features related to their use is limited. Singapore's parks were audited for 30 micro-features, then geospatial analysis characterized micro-features scores for parks nearest to participants' homes. Adults (3,435) reported their park use and park-based physical activity. Using linear regression models, we found living near a park with higher micro-features scores was associated with more time in parks and park-based physical activity. Specific micro-features were associated with more park time (wildlife areas, water features, forested areas, unpaved trails (2-2.6h/month, p<0.05)) and with physical activity in parks (water features, forested areas, large playground, open green spaces (1.8-2.2h/month, p<0.05)). These findings could inform parks planning to support population-health.

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