Abstract

The manner in which features of the built environment, such as walkability and greenness, impact participation in recreational activities and health are complex. We analyzed survey data provided by 282 Ottawa adults in 2016. The survey collected information on participation in recreational physical activities by season, and whether these activities were performed within participants’ neighbourhoods. The SF-12 instrument was used to characterize their overall mental and physical health. Measures of active living environment, and the satellite derived Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) and Google Street View (GSV) greenness indices were assigned to participants’ residential addresses. Logistic regression and least squares regression were used to characterize associations between these measures and recreational physical activity, and self-reported health. The NDVI was not associated with participation in recreational activities in either the winter or summer, or physical or mental health. In contrast, the GSV was positively associated with participation in recreational activities during the summer. Specifically, those in the highest quartile spent, on average, 5.4 more hours weekly on recreational physical activities relative to those in the lowest quartile (p = 0.01). Active living environments were associated with increased utilitarian walking, and reduced reliance on use of motor vehicles. Our findings provide support for the hypothesis that neighbourhood greenness may play an important role in promoting participation in recreational physical activity during the summer.

Highlights

  • More than half of the world’s population lives in urban areas, and this proportion continues to increase [1]

  • We found no statistically significant associations between the satellite-derived measure of greenness, the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), and physical activity, Physical Component Summary (PCS), or Mental

  • Using a cross-sectional study, we examined the roles of neighbourhood greenness and walkability on participation in recreational physical activities, and self-reported mental and physical health in Ottawa, Canada

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Summary

Introduction

More than half of the world’s population lives in urban areas, and this proportion continues to increase [1]. There has been an increasing awareness of the population health impacts of the features of built environment in urban areas. Pedestrian-friendly, or walkable, neighbourhoods that facilitate access to local amenities and well-designed public open space has potential health benefits [4,5]. These benefits may be realized through increased levels of both utilitarian and recreational physical activity, which in turn reduce risks of obesity and chronic disease. The review noted inconsistencies between the strength of the association depending on what methods were used to measure physical activity and the features of the built environment

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