The effect of infrastructural changes in the built environment on physical activity, active transportation and sedentary behavior – A systematic review

Publication date

2018-09-01

Authors

Stappers, N.E.H.
Van Kann, D.H.H.
Ettema, DickISNI 0000000384297245
De Vries, N.K.ISNI 0000000419435143
Kremers, S.P.J.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

This systematic review examined the effect of built environment infrastructural changes (BEICs) on physical activity (PA), active transportation (AT) and sedentary behavior (SB). A literature search resulted in nineteen eligible articles. On- and off-road bicycling and/or walking trails resulted in inconsistent effects on overall PA and walking, and in predominantly positive effects on bicycling. More extensive BEICs led to mixed results, with mainly non-significant effects. However, positive effects on bicycling were found for people living closer to BEICs. None of the studies assessed SB. Improved understanding of the potential of BEICs to increase PA levels and decrease SB at population level asks for more high-quality, in-depth research, that takes into account the broader system.

Keywords

cycling, human, human experiment, review, systematic review, walking, Taverne

Citation

Stappers, N E H, Van Kann, D H H, Ettema, D, De Vries, N K & Kremers, S P J 2018, 'The effect of infrastructural changes in the built environment on physical activity, active transportation and sedentary behavior – A systematic review', Health and Place, vol. 53, pp. 135-149. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2018.08.002