A longitudinal study of the distance that young people walk to school | Safekids NZ

 

 
  

A longitudinal study of the distance that young people walk to school

Walking or cycling to school has been associated with important health benefits. Distance between home and school is the main correlate of active commuting to school, but how far children walk to school and how this changes as children age is unknown. Mode of commuting and objectively-assessed distance to school were measured at 3 time points: aged 9/10 years, 10/11 years and 13/14 years. Data were analysed using ROC-curve analyses. With age, children walked further to school; the threshold distance that best discriminated walkers from passive commuters was 1421 m in 10-year-olds, 1627 m in 11-year-olds and 3046 m in 14-year-olds. Future interventions should consider the distance that young people actually walk.

Record #:
10383
Date:
2015
Format:
Journal Article
Author:
Chillóna, P. et al.
Source:
Health & Place
Citation:
Volume 31, January 2015
Issue pages:
133–137
Keywords:
WALKING;CYCLING;JOURNEY TO SCHOOL
Location:
w
Web Link:

Click here to contact our Information Service about this publication.

Please note you will also need to add the library’s Record # when contacting us.

 

Didn't find what you were looking for? Send our Information Specialist your question via Contact Us.