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Till Koglin

Senior lecturer

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The potential for active commuting by bicycle and its possible effects on public health

Author

  • Johan Raustorp
  • Till Koglin

Summary, in English

Introduction

The World Health Organization (WHO) has concluded that physical inactivity and overweight/obesity are the world's fourth and fifth leading risk factors for non-communicable diseases, respectively. This article investigates the potential for active commuting by bicycle in Scania county, southern Sweden, and its possible impact on public health. Physical inactivity is a growing problem on both an individual and a societal level.
Method, setting and population

A complete statistical survey and geographic analysis has been carried out based on data concerning the home and work addresses of the entire working population in the county of Scania, Sweden as of the end of 2014. This data set includes a total of 575,959 individuals.
Results

Approximately 27.9% of the population can reach their workplace by a 15-min bicycle commute, while 47.2% can reach their workplace in 30 min. It is possible to achieve a 47.2% modal share for active transport in Scania if all individuals within cycling distance of work choose to commute by bicycle. If that were to happen, 19.2% of the working population would meet the WHO's global health recommendations just through their commutes.
Conclusion

The results demonstrate that the spatial distribution of homes and workplaces in Scania is conducive to increasing the mode share for active transport through well-designed physical environments and transport systems that prioritise physical activity.

Department/s

  • Transport and Roads

Publishing year

2019

Language

English

Pages

72-77

Publication/Series

Journal of Transport and Health

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Transport Systems and Logistics
  • Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 2214-1405