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Fourteen pathways between urban transportation and health: A conceptual model and literature review

期刊

JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT & HEALTH
卷 21, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jth.2021.101070

关键词

Public health; Transportation; Motor vehicles; Urban; Equity; Mortality; Morbidity

资金

  1. Texas A&M Transportation Institute's Center for Advancing Research in Transportation Emissions, Energy, and Health (CARTEEH), a U.S. Department of Transportation's University Transportation Center in College Station, TX [69A3551747128]
  2. EPSRC [EP/K037323/1] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Transportation plays a crucial role in our daily lives, influencing access to people, education, jobs, services, and goods. Different transportation choices may have positive or negative impacts on health, including social connectivity, air pollution, injuries, and stress.
Introduction: Transportation is an integral part of our daily lives, giving us access to people, education, jobs, services, and goods. Our transportation choices and patterns are influenced by four interrelated factors: the land use and built environment, infrastructure, available modes, and emerging technologies/disruptors. These factors influence how we can or choose to move ourselves and goods. In turn, these factors impact various exposures, lifestyles and health outcomes. Aim and methods: We developed a conceptual model to clarify the connections between transportation and health. We conducted a literature review focusing on publications from the past seven years. We complemented this with expert knowledge and synthesized information to summarize the health outcomes of transportation, along 14 identified pathways. Results: The pathways linking transportation to health include those that are beneficial, such as when transportation serves as means for social connectivity, independence, physical activity, and access. Some pathways link transportation to detrimental health outcomes from air pollution, road travel injuries, noise, stress, urban heat islands, contamination, climate change, community severance, and restricted green space, blue space, and aesthetics. Other possible effects may come from electromagnetic fields, but this is not definitive. We define each pathway and summarize its health outcomes. We show that transportation-related exposures and associated health outcomes, and their severity, can be influenced by inequity and intrinsic and extrinsic effect modifiers. Conclusions: While some pathways are widely discussed in the literature, others are new or underresearched. Our conceptual model can form the basis for future studies looking to explore the transportation-health nexus. We also propose the model as a tool to holistically assess the impact of transportation decisions on public health.

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