Title: Physical Activity and Active Transportation
1 Physical Activity and Active Transportation
Canadian Fitness and Lifestyle Research
Institute - www.cflri.ca -
2 - Physical activity and health
- The role of active transportation
- Active transportation research resources
- Promoting and advocating for active transportation
3Physical Activity and Health
- Cost of inactivity
- Benefits of Activity
- Recommended Amounts
- Participation Rates
4Cost of Physical Inactivity
Total 5.3 billion
1.6 billion
3.7 billion
Direct costs include medical costs to treat
coronary heart disease, hypertension, stroke,
breast cancer, colon cancer, type 2 diabetes, and
osteoporosis. Indirect costs include the value of
economic output lost because of illness,
injury-related work disability, or premature
death.
Katzmarzyk Janssen. Can J Appl Physiol
20042990-115.
5Physical Activity and Health Benefits
- ? All cause mortality
- ? Cardiovascular disease
- ? Some cancers
- ? Hypertension
- ? Osteoporosis
- ? Musculoskeletal fitness and health
- Mental health
- Functioning and independent living in later life
6How much is enough?
- 30 minutes of moderate intensity exercise (e.g.,
brisk walking) on most days of the week - significant reductions in all-cause and
cardiovascular related mortality - lower risk of hypertension
- Even higher durations
- lower risks of colon and breast cancer
- maintenance of body mass / prevention of weight
gain - Resistance and flexibility improvement
- improved musculoskeletal fitness
- reduced risk of osteoporosis
- helps control of hypertension
- Limit television watching to less than 10 hours
per week.
7Physical Activity and Health
- 49 Canadian adults are at least moderately
active - 35 are overweight and 16 are obese
- about 60 report very good overall health
- 8 report Type 2 diabetes
- nearly 3 in 10 report high blood pressure
- 1 in 10 report heart disease
8Active Transportation as a source of Physical
Activity
- Fits into everyday life
- Environmental benefits
- Social benefits
- Economic benefits
9The Role of Active Transportation
- Walking and cycling
- accessible,
- prevalent
- popular
- Along with public transport
- environmentally friendly
- sustainable
10Environmental Impact of Motorized Transportation
Dependency
Green house Gas Emissions
Urban Sprawl
11Social Capital
12Economic Benefits
13Active Transportation Research and Resources at
CFLRI
- Active Transportation Bulletins
- Research File Lifestyle Tips
- National Population Surveys
- Active Living Potential Measurement
- Publication in Peer Reviewed Journals
14Active Transportation Bulletins
- Elevator Speech documents
- Facts, and quotes for professionals and community
members who want to build a case for active
transportation in their community - Intended to increase knowledge on the link with
each topic and active transportation - Share with
- municipal council members
- municipal staff responsible for land-use
planning, transportation, public utilities,
social services, parks, recreation and building
codes
15Active Transportation Bulletins
- No 1 Health Benefits
- No 2 Barriers
- No 3 Economic Benefits
- No 4 Environmental Benefits
- No 5 Built Infrastructure
- No 6 Safety
- No 7 Increasing Social Capital
- No 8 Role for Municipal Decision Makers
16Research File and Lifestyle Tips
- Recent research in physical activity and healthy
living - The Research File
- practitioners
- Lifestyle Tips
- general public
17Recent Topics of Interest
- Sedentary Behaviours / Simple Steps to an Active
New Year (January 2009) - Active Transportation (April 2009)
- Policy Advocacy (July 2009)
- Health Benefits of Physical Activity for Adults
(August 2009) - Public Transit and Physical Activity (September
2009)
18Population SurveysPhysical Activity Monitor
- Current situation and a system for tracking
change - Assess overall change and potential impact of
policies and strategies - Incorporates findings and recommendations from
the published literature
19Physical Activity Monitor
- Prevalence of walking and cycling
- Supportive physical environments
- Proximity to amenities
- Places to walk and bicycle
- Crime rates
- Traffic
- Community infrastructure
- Walking trails
- Designated bike lanes, trails, paths
- Recreation trails
- Designated facilities
- Commuting
- Active choices for children and for adults
20Physical Activity MonitorWalking and cycling
- 26 of children use active modes of
transportation to get to school, 13 use mixed
modes
21 22 23National Transportation Survey Changes from 1998
to 2004
- ?walking as a leisure or recreational activity
- ?proportion of people who live within a
reasonable walking distance (2.5 km) of at least
one routine destination - ?walking to a routine destination at least
sometimes, but decrease in doing so at least half
the time - ?cycling for leisure and recreation, and for
utilitarian travel
24National Transportation Survey Adult Canadians
- Would like to walk and cycle more
- Feel that governments have a role to play in
supporting active transportation - Agree that they have pleasant places to walk near
their home - Are uneasy about traffic safety when it comes to
cycling
25National Transportation SurveyChildren
- Half do not walk to school
- Three-quarters do not cycle to school
- Parents say the school is too far
- Safety is somewhat of a concern
- an improvement in safety would not change the
likelihood that child would travel to school
using an active mode
26Walking or Wheeling to Routine Destinations in
the previous twelve months
27Reasons to Walk or Cycle for Transportation
28Facilitating Walking
29Facilitating Cycling
30Neighbourhood Active Living Assessment Potential
Score
- Scientifically valid and reliable tool that
measures - Activity friendliness
- Safety
- Density of destinations
- Numerous studies published in peer reviewed
Journals
31Advocacy
- Political
- Media
- Professional mobilization
- Community mobilization
- Mobilization from within
32Political Advocacy
- Build relationships with key policy makers
- Identify a political champion
- Construct arguments around a governments
existing policy priorities - Focus arguments for physical inactivity
interventions on relevance across government
sectors - Develop presentations
- Invite and involve politicians
33Media Advocacy
- Develop and strengthen links with media contacts
- Identify and use high profile champions
- Frame media physical activity messages across a
diversity of public issues - Use a variety of media
- Develop message consistency and sound bites
- Conduct research to support media stories
- Identify human interest angles
- Seek and present photo opportunities
34Professional Mobilization
- Strengthen links with professional allies
- Lead networks development
- Use conferences/meetings/symposia
- Conduct targeted workforce development and
training - Encourage and support workforce advocates
- Equip professionals with arguments regarding
current issues, new evidence and breaking news to
ensure that the messages are consistent and well
informed.
35Community Mobilization
- Mobilize participants in programs
- Establish and strengthen ongoing links with local
government - Engage and support NGOs
- Encourage and support community members as
advocates - Recognize/reward successful individuals and
programs - Attempt to shift norms
- Build into community events
36Advocacy from Within
- Prioritise physical activity in strategic plans
- Recruit sympathetic board and committee members
- Set an example to other organisations
- Run programs in your workplace and engage the
leaders - Internal promotion through newsletters, e-news,
e-mail - Arrange praise from outside organizations
37Uses of CFLRI Resources
- Links from other websites
- Newsletters
- Workshops
- Handouts
38Uses of CFLRI Resources
I often have the need to promote active
transportation to other manager colleagues and
the need for flexibility and barrier removal for
their staff. Being able to provide credible
concise documents from CFLRI will strengthen my
arguments.
I guess I see the fact sheets as a credible
source of information that almost anybody can use
to create and reinforce arguments for what I see
as a very important opportunity to get people
more active.
39Summary
- Active transportation contributes to our
physical, social and economic well being - Active transportation infrastructure make it the
easy choice - There are opportunities to increase active
transportation supports - Advocacy can help make this happen
40 - Thank You!
- - www.cflri.ca -