作者
Sarah E Conderino, Justin M Feldman, Benjamin Spoer, Marc N Gourevitch, Lorna E Thorpe
发表日期
2021/9/1
期刊
American journal of preventive medicine
卷号
61
期号
3
页码范围
394-401
出版商
Elsevier
简介
Introduction
Neighborhood walkability has been established as a potentially important determinant of various health outcomes that are distributed inequitably by race/ethnicity and sociodemographic status. The objective of this study is to assess the differences in walkability across major urban centers in the U.S.
Methods
City- and census tract–level differences in walkability were assessed in 2020 using the 2019 Walk Score across 500 large cities in the U.S.
Results
At both geographic levels, high-income and majority White geographic units had the lowest walkability overall. Walkability was lower with increasing tertile of median income among majority White, Latinx, and Asian American and Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander neighborhoods. However, this association was reversed within majority Black neighborhoods, where tracts in lower-income tertiles had the lowest walkability. Associations varied substantially …
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SE Conderino, JM Feldman, B Spoer, MN Gourevitch… - American journal of preventive medicine, 2021