Don’t buckle them up. Kids need safe routes to walk & bike school

10 Apr, 2018
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Stop prioritising the car to tackle childhood obesity, governments and planners urged 

UK governments need stop prioritising the car if they are serious about tackling childhood obesity, insist clinicians and transport experts*.

The dominance of the “windscreen perspective” whereby governments and planners view the world quite literally from inside cars, has allowed car travel to become the “default choice,” argue the authors. 

Consequently, investment in road building far exceeds that for active travel—public transport, footpaths, and cycle lanes— “resulting in an environment that often feels too risky for walking or cycling. For a fraction of the road building programme cost, we could see not just safe routes to schools, but, even more importantly, safe routes wholesale across urban areas, they argue.

“The narrative needs to change; we need investment in safe and enjoyable spaces for walking and cycling to school. And convenient and affordable public transport options” said Dr Paul Kelly, one of the authors of the call to action published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine on 10th April 2018.

Spend 10% on active transport

“We’d like to see at least 10% of governments transport budget spent on Active Travel in all countries to help develop high quality walking and cycling infrastructure, says Prof Chris Oliver, lead author of the editorial. “All children need safe routes to school” says Oliver who is a recently retired orthopaedic surgeon and Honorary Professor in Physical Activity for Health at the University of Edinburgh (Twitter @CyclingSurgeon).

“We’ve been hearing more and more calls for less and less traffic, said Dr Randy Rzewnicki, ECF policy officer. “WHO has not been shy about saying that reductions in private motorized transport are an essential feature of making cities healthier. Norway’s latest transport plan says that there can be no increase in car traffic.”

“Now these prominent researchers say that “reducing car use, particularly in urban areas” is essential, said Rzewnicki.  “They note that Scotland had doubled it’s active travel commitment to 80 billion GBP per year. Together with the 30 km/h law rolled out last year in Edinburgh, these are good moves. But there and across Europe, more needs to be done.”

Parents too worried about volume of traffic to let their children walk or cycle to school

Children in the UK are not active enough, said Paul Kelly Researcher and lecturer at University of Edinburgh. “On top of this, walking and cycling to school have been declining for 50 years. Children are therefore missing out on physical, mental and social health benefits. And setting harmful habits and behaviours for adulthood. This can in large part be explained by too much focus and investment on cars and roads.”

The average length of a school journey has nearly doubled since the 1980s to just under 4 miles in 2013. But the age at which parents will allow their children to go to school by themselves has been steadily creeping up amid fears about road safety.

So they drive their children to school. But what is often not recognised is just how much air pollution children travelling by car are exposed to inside the vehicle under urban driving conditions, the authors point out.

Encouraging independent travel not only helps shed the pounds, but has knock-on social and mental health benefits, and it breaks the cycle of normalising car travel for future generations, they say.

They admit there is no single solution, but safe routes to school are needed. The UK could adopt the school travel initiatives pioneered by Germany, The Netherlands, and Denmark, they suggest.

And it could plough more cash into the Sustainable Travel Towns programme, already implemented in some parts of the UK. This programme of town-wide measures, which aims to curb car use, has helped boost economic growth, cut carbon emissions and promote quality of life in those areas where it has been adopted, the authors point out.

In an accompanying letter, sent to all four UK transport ministers—Chris Grayling (England);  Humza Yousaf (Scotland); Ken Skates (Wales); and Karan Bradley (Northern Ireland)—the authors point to significant savings to the NHS, reductions in pollution levels, and ingraining sustainable travel behaviours among future generations if active travel were to be prioritised.

“The rhetoric of improving the environment in favour of children’s active travel has been visible for at least two decades, but tangible changes have largely been absent from transport planning,” they write.

“We suggest the time is right to redress the imbalance and give back to today’s children many of the freedoms that older adults recall and benefited from in terms of the levels of independent mobility,” they conclude.

*Authors

Professor Christopher Oliver, Physical Activity for Health Research Centre, Institute for Sport, University of Edinburgh

Dr Paul Kelly, Physical Activity for Health Research Centre

Dr Graham Barker, Physical Activity for Health Research Centre

Dave du Feu, SPOKES, the Lothian Cycle Campaign, Edinburgh

Dr Adrian Davis, Transport Research Institute, Edinburgh Napier University

Editorial: There is too much traffic for Alex to walk to school, so we drive: a call to action based on a 42 year old trend  doi 10.1136/bjsports-2017-098933  http://bjsm.bmj.com/lookup/doi/10.1136/bjsports-2017-098933

Letter to Ministers:  There is too much traffic for Alex to walk to school so we drive  doi 10.1136/bjsports-2018-099261  http://bjsm.bmj.com/lookup/doi/10.1136/bjsports-2018-099261

Author contact

Professor Christopher Oliver, Physical Activity for Health Research Centre, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland

Email: chris.oliver@ed.ac.uk

Twitter @CyclingSurgeon 

About the journal

The British Journal of Sports Medicine is one of more than 60 specialist journals published by BMJ.

http://bjsm.bmj.//com

 

Contact the author

Randy Rzewnicki PhD's picture
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