Department of Urban Studies & Planning, UC San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, San Diego, CA, 92093, USA.
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, San Diego, CA, 92093, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Aug 2;22(1):1475. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13834-1.
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted life in extraordinary ways impacting health and daily mobility. Public transit provides a strategy to improve individual and population health through increased active travel and reduced vehicle dependency, while ensuring equitable access to jobs, healthcare, education, and mitigating climate change. However, health safety concerns during the COVID-19 pandemic eroded ridership, which could have longstanding negative consequences. Research is needed to understand how mobility and health change as the pandemic recedes and how transit investments impact health and equity outcomes.
The TROLLEY (TRansit Opportunities for HeaLth, Livability, Exercise and EquitY) study will prospectively investigate a diverse cohort of university employees after the opening of a new light rail transit (LRT) line and the easing of campus COVID-19 restrictions. Participants are current staff who live either < 1 mile, 1-2 miles, or > 2 miles from LRT, with equal distribution across economic and racial/ethnic strata. The primary aim is to assess change in physical activity, travel mode, and vehicle miles travelled using accelerometer and GPS devices. Equity outcomes include household transportation and health-related expenditures. Change in health outcomes, including depressive symptoms, stress, quality of life, body mass index and behavior change constructs related to transit use will be assessed via self-report. Pre-pandemic variables will be retrospectively collected. Participants will be measured at 3 times over 2 years of follow up. Longitudinal changes in outcomes will be assessed using multilevel mixed effects models. Analyses will evaluate whether proximity to LRT, sociodemographic, and environmental factors modify change in outcomes over time.
The TROLLEY study will utilize rigorous methods to advance our understanding of health, well-being, and equity-oriented outcomes of new LRT infrastructure through the COVID-19 recovery period, in a sample of demographically diverse adult workers whose employment location is accessed by new transit. Results will inform land use, transportation and health investments, and workplace interventions. Findings have the potential to elevate LRT as a public health priority and provide insight on how to ensure public transit meets the needs of vulnerable users and is more resilient in the face of future health pandemics.
The TROLLEY study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov ( NCT04940481 ) June 17, 2021, and OSF Registries ( https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/PGEHU ) June 24, 2021, prior to participant enrollment.
COVID-19 大流行以非凡的方式扰乱了人们的生活,影响了健康和日常活动。公共交通提供了一种通过增加积极出行和减少对车辆的依赖来改善个人和人口健康的策略,同时确保公平获得工作、医疗保健、教育,并减轻气候变化的影响。然而,COVID-19 大流行期间的健康安全问题削弱了乘客量,这可能会产生长期的负面影响。需要研究了解随着大流行的消退,流动性和健康状况如何变化,以及交通投资如何影响健康和公平结果。
TROLLEY(TRansit Opportunities for HeaLth, Livability, Exercise and EquitY)研究将在新轻轨(LRT)线路开通和校园 COVID-19 限制放宽后,前瞻性地调查一组多样化的大学员工。参与者是目前居住在距离 LRT<1 英里、1-2 英里或>2 英里的员工,在经济和种族/族裔阶层之间分布均匀。主要目的是使用加速度计和 GPS 设备评估身体活动、出行方式和车辆里程的变化。公平结果包括家庭交通和与健康相关的支出。通过自我报告评估健康结果的变化,包括抑郁症状、压力、生活质量、体重指数和与使用公共交通相关的行为改变结构。大流行前的变量将通过回顾性收集。参与者将在 2 年的随访中测量 3 次。使用多层次混合效应模型评估结果的纵向变化。分析将评估 LRT 附近的位置、社会人口和环境因素是否会随着时间的推移改变结果的变化。
TROLLEY 研究将利用严格的方法,通过 COVID-19 恢复期,在一个由新交通方式可达工作地点的人口统计学上多样化的成年员工样本中,了解新轻轨基础设施的健康、福利和以公平为导向的结果。结果将为土地利用、交通和健康投资以及工作场所干预措施提供信息。研究结果有可能提升轻轨作为公共卫生重点,并提供有关如何确保公共交通满足弱势用户需求以及在未来健康大流行中更具弹性的见解。
TROLLEY 研究于 2021 年 6 月 17 日在 ClinicalTrials.gov(NCT04940481)和 OSF 注册中心(https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/PGEHU)注册,在参与者入组之前。