The Oxford Health Alliance summit in Sydney has been told that urban environments and workplaces must be designed to encourage physical activity in order to combat obesity, diabetes and heart disease.
The way to effectively deal with the crises of obesity and global climate change is to redesign our cities as human habitats. Professor Tony Capon made this claim when he was addressing the Oxford Health Alliance summit, Building a Healthy Future: Chronic Disease and our Environment.
Prof Tony Capon, Project Director for the Oxford Health Alliance's Environmental Design for Prevention Initiative said, “We need to build the physical activity back into our lives and its not simply about bike paths, it’s about developing an urban habitat that enables people to live healthy lives: ensuring that people can meet most of their daily needs within walking and cycling distance of where they live.”
The press release says that the lack of physical activity is a risk factor in many chronic diseases and is estimated to cause 1.9 million deaths worldwide each year. More than half of the world's population does not reach recommended levels of physical activity.
Capon believes that action on health and climate change is intertwined.
“Cars have a place in cities but they should not dominate. The car needs to fit within a city like everything else and no one thing should be dominant. We have got to have the physical conditions right and then people have got to make the choice to live in a different way.”
Capon ranks the top urban planning priorities for improving health as:
• locating jobs, services, schools and shops close to where people live;
• promoting active modes of transport (walking and cycling)
• improving mass transit options (bus, train, tram)
• ensuring ready access to healthy food
• developing attractive public spaces
The Oxford Health Alliance will today formally announce the winners of its international Fit City competition designed to provoke thought and discussion amongst young people about the increasing threat of urban environments to health.