McDonald Noreen C
City and Regional Planning, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 2007 Jun;32(6):509-16. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2007.02.022.
Rising rates of overweight children have focused attention on walking and biking to school as a means to increase children's physical activity levels. Despite this attention, there has been little documentation of trends in school travel over the past 30 years or analysis of what has caused the changes in mode choice for school trips.
This article analyzes data from the 1969, 1977, 1983, 1990, 1995, and 2001 National Personal Transportation Survey conducted by the U.S. Department of Transportation to document the proportion of students actively commuting to school in aggregate and by subgroups and analyze the relative influence of trip, child, and household characteristics across survey years. All analyses were done in 2006.
The National Personal Transportation Survey data show that in 1969, 40.7% (95% confidence interval [CI]=37.9-43.5) of students walked or biked to school; by 2001, the proportion was 12.9% (95% CI=11.8-13.9). Distance to school has increased over time and may account for half of the decline in active transportation to school. It also has the strongest influence on the decision to walk or bike across survey years.
Declining rates of active transportation among school travelers represents a worrisome loss of physical activity. Policymakers should continue to support programs designed to encourage children to walk to school such as Safe Routes to School and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's KidsWalk. In addition, officials need to design policies that encourage schools to be placed within neighborhoods to ensure that the distance to school is not beyond an acceptable walking distance.
超重儿童比例的上升使人们将注意力集中在步行和骑自行车上学上,以此作为提高儿童身体活动水平的一种方式。尽管受到了关注,但过去30年学校出行趋势的记录很少,对学校出行方式选择变化的原因也缺乏分析。
本文分析了美国交通部在1969年、1977年、1983年、1990年、1995年和2001年进行的全国个人交通调查数据,以记录学生总体及各子群体积极步行上学的比例,并分析不同调查年份出行、儿童和家庭特征的相对影响。所有分析均在2006年完成。
全国个人交通调查数据显示,1969年,40.7%(95%置信区间[CI]=37.9 - 43.5)的学生步行或骑自行车上学;到2001年,这一比例为12.9%(95% CI = 11.8 - 13.9)。随着时间推移,上学距离增加,这可能是积极步行上学比例下降的一半原因。在不同调查年份,上学距离对步行或骑自行车上学的决定影响也最大。
学校出行中积极出行比例下降意味着身体活动令人担忧地减少。政策制定者应继续支持旨在鼓励儿童步行上学的项目,如“安全上学路”和疾病控制与预防中心的“儿童步行”项目。此外,官员们需要制定政策,鼓励学校建在社区内,以确保上学距离不超过可接受的步行距离。