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Correlates of walking to school and implications for public policies: survey results from parents of elementary school children in Austin, Texas

Zhu, Xuemei; & Lee, Chanam. (2009). Correlates of walking to school and implications for public policies: survey results from parents of elementary school children in Austin, Texas. Journal of Public Health Policy, 30(S1), S177-S202.


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Walking can be a healthy, sustainable, and equitable mode of transportation, but is not widely used for children's school travel. This study identifies multi-level correlates of walking to/from school and relevant policy implications. We surveyed parents/guardians of 2,695 students from 19 elementary schools in Austin, Texas, which featured diverse sociodemographic and environmental characteristics. Among the personal and social factors, negative correlates were parents' education, car ownership, personal barriers, and school bus availability; positive correlates were parents' and children's positive attitude and regular walking behavior, and supportive peer influences. Of physical environmental factors, the strongest negative correlates were distance and safety concerns, followed by the presence of highways/freeways, convenience stores, office buildings, and bus stops en route. Our findings suggest that society should give high priority to lower socioeconomic status populations and to multi-agency policy interventions that facilitate environmental changes, safety improvements, and educational programs targeting both parents and children.




JOUR



Zhu, Xuemei
Lee, Chanam



2009


Journal of Public Health Policy

30

S1

S177-S202






0197-5897

10.1057/jphp.2008.51



498