The Effectiveness of Healthy Community Approaches on Positive Health Outcomes in Canada and the United States
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Healthy Community Approaches | Target Population | Description |
---|---|---|
Healthy Cities | Whole populations | World Health Organization (WHO) initiative established in 1986 that seeks to protect health and support sustainable development. The basic features are community participation and empowerment, intersectoral collaboration, equity and action to address the social determinants of health [5]. |
Child Friendly Cities | Children | Launched in 1996, this global movement supported by United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) promotes children’s rights to the highest quality of life. The nine elements include children’s participation in issues that involve them, child friendly legal framework, children’s rights strategy, child rights unit, child impact assessment, budget to support children’s activities, children’s national report, advocacy for children’s rights and children’s ombudsman or commissioner [6]. |
Smart Growth Planning | Whole populations | An approach, first launched in 1995, to land use planning and development that supports health, economic growth and prioritizes conservation. The ten fundamental principles include: mixed land use, promoting compact building design, providing a range of housing options, fostering attractive communities with a strong sense of place, preservation of open spaces, development of existing communities, variety of transportation choices, encouraging fair and cost effective development and supporting community collaboration in development [7]. |
Safe Routes to School | Children in school settings | The US national program that uses multiple modalities including education, engineering improvements, enforcement and encouragement to increase student active travel [8]. Although activities occurred as early as 1997 in the US, the National Program Safe Routes to School Program was established by federal legislation in 2005. |
Safe Communities | Whole populations | A global initiative supported by WHO that engages communities to promote safety and injury prevention. Multiple global networks have been established and provide accreditation to committed communities who satisfy the designated criteria [9]. The concept was introduced as a policy initiative in Sweden in 1989. |
Active Living Communities | Whole populations in selected communities | A movement that is dedicated to increasing opportunities for population physical activity. Some projects may include other components such as Safe Routes to School or Smart Growth [10]. Active Living by Design (ALbD) was at the forefront of the movement and was launched in 2002. |
Livable Communities | Whole populations | Livable communities embody multiple factors that contribute to good quality of life such as recreational and educational opportunities, attractive built and natural environment, social stability and economic prosperity [11]. Programs have been implemented by various partners for more than 25 years. |
Social Cities | Whole Populations | A social city fosters social connectedness of its residents and improves the social architecture to strengthen these relationships [12]. The concept has been growing in popularity since 2009. |
Age-Friendly Cities | Elderly population | Global Initiative that promotes active aging of older residents and increases opportunities for their social participation and security. The movement builds on the 2002 Policy Framework for Active Aging and considers key domains of the social and physical environment that need to be optimized to enhance the quality of life of older persons. These include the outdoor spaces and buildings, transportation, housing, social participation, respect and social inclusion, civic participation and employment, communication and information, community support and health [13]. |
Dementia Friendly Cities | Persons living with dementia and their care givers | This initiative is supported by the Alzheimer’s Society and seeks to improve inclusion and quality of life of people living with dementia [14]. It has been gaining momentum especially in the United Kingdom since 2012. |
2. Methods
2.1. Data Sources and Search Strategy
2.2. Selection and Review Process
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Safe Routes to School
Author/Date | Selection bias | Study design | Confounders | Blinding | Data collection methods | Withdrawals/drop outs | Global rating | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Safe Routes to School | |||||||||
Mendoza et al., 2009 [21] | Moderate | Moderate | Weak | N/A | Strong | Moderate | Moderate | ||
Mendoza et al., 2011 [22] | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Weak | ||
Boarnet et al., 2005 [23] | Weak | Weak | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Moderate | Weak | ||
Cooper et al., 2010 [24] | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Weak | ||
Buliung et al., 2011 [25] | Weak | Weak | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Weak | Weak | ||
Mammen et al., 2014 [26] | Weak | Moderate | Moderate | N/A | Strong | Weak | Weak | ||
Henderson et al.2013 [27] | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Weak | Weak | ||
McDonald et al., 2013 [28] | Weak | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Weak | ||
McDonald et al., 2014 [29] | Weak | Weak | Strong | Moderate | Strong | Moderate | Weak | ||
McDonald et al., 2013 [28] | Weak | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Weak | ||
Moudon et al., 2012 [30] | Weak | Weak | Moderate | N/A | Weak | Strong | Weak | ||
Staunton et al., 2003 [31] | Weak | Weak | Weak | N/A | Moderate | Weak | Weak | ||
Buckley et al., 2013 [32] | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Weak | Weak | ||
Johnson et al., 2006 [33] | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Weak | ||
Sayers et al., 2012 [34] | Weak | Weak | Strong | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Weak | ||
Di Maggio et al., 2013 [35] | Moderate | Moderate | Weak | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | ||
Blomberg et al.,2008 [36] | Moderate | Weak | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Moderate | Weak | ||
Orenstein et al., 2007 [37] | Moderate | Weak | Weak | N/A | Weak | Moderate | Weak | ||
Ragland et al., 2014 [38] | Weak | Weak | Weak | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Weak | ||
Mendoza et al., 2012 [39] | Weak | Strong | Moderate | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Weak | ||
Active living communities | |||||||||
Chomitz et al., 2012 [40] | Moderate | Moderate | Strong | Weak | Strong | Moderate | Moderate | ||
TenBrink et al., 2009 [41] | Weak | Weak | Weak | Weak | Weak | Weak | Weak | ||
Sayers et al., 2012 [42] | Weak | Weak | Weak | Weak | Moderate | Moderate | Weak | ||
Safe communities | |||||||||
Istre et al., 2011 [43] | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Weak | Weak | Moderate | Weak | ||
Smart growth planning | |||||||||
Dunton et al., 2011 [44] | Weak | Moderate | Weak | Moderate | Moderate | Strong | Weak | ||
Age-friendly cities | |||||||||
Lehning et al., 2012 [45] | Strong | Weak | Strong | Weak | Strong | Moderate | Weak | ||
Menec and Nowicki, 2014 [46] | Weak | Weak | Strong | Weak | Moderate | Moderate | Weak |
Study | Outcomes |
---|---|
Safe Routes to School | |
Mendoza et al., 2009 [21]
| The proportion of children who walked to intervention (20% ± 2%) and control schools (15% ± 2%) was similar at baseline. At 12 month follow up, a higher proportion of children walked to intervention schools (25% ± 2%) compared to control schools (7% ± 1%, p = 0.001). |
Mendoza et al., 2011 [22]
| Weekly percent active commuting increased in the intervention group, while a decrease was observed in the control group (p < 0.0001). Acculturation and parent outcome expectations were associated with a change in percent active commuting. In multivariable models predicting minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity, children in the intervention group increased their minutes while a decline was observed in the participants in the control group (p = 0.029). |
Boarnet et al., 2005 [23]
| Among children who passed the project on the way to school, a greater proportion (15.4%) walked or bicycled more after the construction projects when compared to children who did not (4.3%) encounter the projects on the way to school (p < 0.01). |
Cooper et al., 2010 [24]
| Parental surveys reported modest increases in children walking to (29%) and from (26%) school over baseline. However student tallies showed marked variation with smaller increases (1 to 5%) in schools with paid coordinators and only one of the other six schools showed a clear increase (7% to 14%) in walking. In general, schools with paid coordinators had 50% more students walking in the morning and 45% in the afternoon than schools with volunteers. |
Buliung et al., 2011 [25]
| Small increases occurred in rates of active transportation from 43.5% (baseline) to 45.9% (follow up). Higher rates (43.5%) of active travel occurred at afternoons compared to mornings (37.3%). Among household respondents, 13.3% indicated that the intervention “resulted in less driving”. |
Mammen et al., 2014 [26]
| There was no increase over baseline in rates of active travel either in morning or afternoon after one year. Marked variation occurred in AST at the school level. The season of data collection predicted a decrease in AST in the morning (p < 0.05). |
Henderson et al., 2013 [27]
| There was an increase in the rates of walking to school in the morning (p < 0.0001) during the intervention period however no significant change was observed for the afternoon commute. Parental perception about school support for active modes of transport and the health benefits (0.01 < p < 0.001) and enjoyment associated with active modes of transportation (p < 0.0001) also improved. |
McDonald et al., 2013 [28]
| Regression models were used to estimate the marginal effects associated with walking or biking to school among the study population. Schools with more types of interventions had larger proportions of students who walked or biked to school. Programs that delivered education and encouragement components in addition to two other SRTS interventions were associated with a 20 percentage point increase in walking and a small but non-significant increase in biking. Infrastructure improvement interventions had borderline significance which might have been related to late completion of these components in the program cycle. Provision of covered bike parking was associated with large increases in walking (19 percentage points) and biking (11 percentage points). The Boltage intervention produced small increases in walking (5 percentage points) and biking (4 percentage points). |
McDonald et al., 2014 [29]
| Fractional logit models were used to estimate the marginal effects of the presence and number of years of SRTS interventions on walking and bicycling. Rates of active travel increased with each year of participation in SRTS programs. After five years, there was an absolute increase of 13 percentage points in the proportion of children who walked or biked. In multivariable models after adjustment for school and environmental characteristics, walking and bicycling rose by 1.1 percentage points for each year of participation in SRTS programs. The presence of an engineering component was associated with 3.3 percentage point increase in walking and bicycling. This was unrelated to the length of time that the improvement was in place. Smaller increases (0.9 percentage points) were associated with education and encouragement interventions. |
Moudon et al., 2012 [30]
| There was a statistically significant increase in rates of active transport for all modes of transport in all states except for biking in Florida. Rates of walking increased more than cycling. Changes in rates of active transport were not correlated with any project, school or neighborhood characteristics. |
Staunton et al., 2003 [31]
| There were marked increases in walking (64%), biking (114%) and carpooling (39% decrease in children arriving by car) over the two year period. |
Buckley et al. 2013 [32]
| The number of children who walked to school increased by 25% (19%–26%). During the same period, there was a decrease in the proportion of children walking to school at comparison sites. Direct observations of children at school crossings showed small improvements in street crossing safety over baseline however key desirable behaviors were present in less than 50% of all observed crossings. |
Johnson et al., 2006 [33]
| The number of children who walked to school increased by 25% (19%–26%). During the same period, there was a decrease in the proportion of children walking to school at comparison sites. Direct observations of children at school crossings showed small improvements in street crossing safety over baseline however key desirable behaviors were present in less than 50% of all observed crossings. |
Sayers et al., 2012 [34]
| There was no difference between the groups in physical activity levels (p = 0.17). The percentage of time spent in moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) during the study was 38 (20.9 ± 6.9) for WSB participants and 39 (23.4 ± 8) in comparison group. In multivariable models, age was negatively associated with percentage of time spent in moderate to vigorous physical activity (r = −0.79, p < 0.001). |
Di Maggio and Li 2013 [35]
| Annual pedestrian injuries declined over time however the most pronounced reduction (33% 95% CI 30–36) was observed among school aged children (5–19 years) compared to 14% (95% CI 12–16) among other age groups. Pedestrian injury rates among school aged children in census tracts with SRTS interventions decreased between the pre-intervention and post intervention periods as well as during school travel hours (8 to 4.4 injuries per 10,000 persons). These observations were not apparent in census tracts without SRTS interventions. |
Blomberg et al. 2008 [36]
| There was a general decline in pedestrian and bicycling collison sover time. Marked reductions occurred for children 4 to 12 yeats served by SRTS focus sites when compared to state wide collisons, although the differences were not statistically significant. |
Orenstein et al., 2007 [37]
| The authors compared the change in injuries involving school aged children (5 to 18 years) pre and post SRTS construction projects for intervention and control sites in California. There was a general decline in the number of injuries between 1998 and 2005 with a similar percentage reduction in the annual number of injuries for both SRTS (13%) and non SRTS sites (15%). However when the changes in mobility patterns were accounted for, it was estimated that safety benefits ranged from no net change to a decrease of 49% in collisions among students at SRTS sites. |
Ragland et al., 2014 [38]
| In pedestrians ages 8 to 18 years there was a 50% reduction in collisions in the treatment area (within 250 feet of the countermeasure buffer zones). Although effect not statistically significant. Among pedestrians of all ages, there was a statistically significant 75% reduction of collisions in the treated areas compared to control areas. In the mobility analysis, living within 250 feet of the SRTS project improvement was associated with an increased probability of walking to school. |
Mendoza et al., 2012 [39]
| Compared to children at control schools, children at intervention schools has five times higher odds of crossing at crosswalk or corner (95% CI 2.79–8.99, p < 0.01) however also had five fold lower odds of stopping at the curb 95% CI 0.15–0.31, p < 0.01). Parent perception of neighborhood safety and number of traffic lanes were not associated with pedestrian safety outcomes in mixed models (p > 0.05). |
Active Living Communities | |
Chomitz et al., 2012 [40]
| Adults in the intervention city were more likely than those in the comparison city to report meeting recommended physical activity guidelines (OR = 1.10, 95% CI 1.04–1.17). No differences were found in meeting the recommended physical activity guidelines among of children in both cities in adjusted analyses [middle school OR 1.06 (95% CI 0.78–1.45); high school OR 1.24 95% CI 0.98–1.58). |
TenBrink et al., 2009 [41]
| The number of students who walked to school (5%–15% increase) and participation in sentinel events such as Walk to School Day and Smart Commute Day increased during the project. Participation in Smart Commute Day increased from 165 (2004) to 520 persons (2008). Walk to school day participants increased from 600 in 2003 to 1200 in 2008. |
Sayers et al., 2012 [42]
| Pedestrian and cyclists counts increased from 2007 to 2009 particularly in the latter part (July and October) of 2009. Repeated measures ANOVA showed a statistically significant effect of year (p = 0.01), season (p < 0.001) and interaction of year and season (p = 0.05). Survey data indicated increased awareness of ALbD programming through media and advertisements in 2008 compared to 2003 (63% of respondents, N = 813). |
Safe Communities | |
Istre et al., 2011 [43]
| In multivariable analyses, child restraint use (OR = 1.6 95% CI 1.2–2.2), drivers who were wearing a seatbelt (OR = 2.2 95% CI 1.5–3.2) and children riding in the back seat (OR = 1.3 95% CI 1.0–1.6) increased significantly over baseline for target communities compared to communities that did not receive the intervention. |
Smart Growth Planning | |
Dunton et al., 2012 [44]
| Children in smart growth communities engaged in a greater proportion of physical activity bouts a few blocks from home (p < 0.001) and travelled more by walking (p < 0.011) than children in control communities. Over time, social context of physical activity did not change for either group however children in smart growth communities were more likely to report decreased physical activity indoors and an increase in outdoor locations with no traffic (p = 0.036). There was a greater increase in six month daily moderate to vigorous physical activity among children in intervention communities however it was not statistically significant (p = 0.10). |
Age-Friendly Cities | |
Lehning et al., 2012 [45]
| In adjusted multivariable analyses, significant predictors of better self-rated health included access to health care (p < 0.01), social support (p < 0.01) and community engagement (p < 0.01) while neighborhood problems were associated with poorer self-rated health (p < 0.01). Addition of age-friendly environment characteristics weakened the association between self-rated health and three health measures (two functional limitations and chronic conditions) although still significant p < 0.001). Education and income variables were no longer significant when age-friendly characteristics were included in the model. |
Menec and Nowicki, 2014 [46]
| Higher Age-Friendly ratings were associated with greater life satisfaction (p < 0.0001) and self-perceived health (<0.01). In multivariable analyses among seniors, the Age-Friendly Index as well as five of the seven domains was associated with life satisfaction. Community support and health services were not associated with any health outcomes. Self-perceived health was associated with fewer age-friendly domains including physical environment, housing, social environment and transportation options. These results differed for younger respondents as age friendliness was not associated with self-perceived health and life satisfaction was only associated with health services/community support and opportunities for participation (p < 0.05). |
3.2. Active Living Communities
3.3. Age-Friendly Cities
3.4. Safe Communities
3.5. Smart Growth Planning
3.6. Other Healthy Community Approaches
4. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ASRTS | Active and Safe Routes to School; |
ALbD | Active Living by Design; |
CDC | Centers for Disease Control; |
EPPHP | Effective Public Health Practice Project; |
NTL | National Transportation Library; |
SAFETEA-LU | Safe Accountable Flexible Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users; |
STP | School Travel Planning; |
SRTS | Safe Routes to School; |
UNICEF | United Nations Children Fund; |
WHO | World Health Organization; |
WSB | Walking School Bus. |
Appendix: Search Strategy for Safe Routes to School
Medline OVID SP (2000 – 2014)
| SCOPUS (Limits to English, 2000 – 2014)
|
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Williams-Roberts, H.; Jeffery, B.; Johnson, S.; Muhajarine, N. The Effectiveness of Healthy Community Approaches on Positive Health Outcomes in Canada and the United States. Soc. Sci. 2016, 5, 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci5010003
Williams-Roberts H, Jeffery B, Johnson S, Muhajarine N. The Effectiveness of Healthy Community Approaches on Positive Health Outcomes in Canada and the United States. Social Sciences. 2016; 5(1):3. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci5010003
Chicago/Turabian StyleWilliams-Roberts, Hazel, Bonnie Jeffery, Shanthi Johnson, and Nazeem Muhajarine. 2016. "The Effectiveness of Healthy Community Approaches on Positive Health Outcomes in Canada and the United States" Social Sciences 5, no. 1: 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci5010003
APA StyleWilliams-Roberts, H., Jeffery, B., Johnson, S., & Muhajarine, N. (2016). The Effectiveness of Healthy Community Approaches on Positive Health Outcomes in Canada and the United States. Social Sciences, 5(1), 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci5010003