*Presentations
Available*
Healthy Communities for Young and Old: How Transit and
Better Community Design Help The Most Vulnerable Generations
Monday, May 1, 2006
1:30
- 3:00 p.m.,
2167 Rayburn
House Office
Building
The
Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) invites you to a
Congressional briefing on the role of public transportation and better community design in
improving the quality of life for the nation’s youngest and
oldest generations.
An increasing proportion of
U.S.
residents is comprised of the oldest and youngest Americans - with
more than a quarter of the population younger than 18, and 12
percent, 65 years and older.
Yet
the ways in which our communities are designed pose obstacles to
the young and old, often hampering their autonomy and diminishing
their health.
The high cost of
gasoline is a huge threat to our most vulnerable populations -
young, old and low-income.
More than ever, people
need mobility options. This
briefing will explore current trends in the health and well-being
of children and seniors and how improved community design and
expanded transportation choices could enhance health and quality
of life.
Speakers
at this briefing will include experts on livable communities,
land-use and transportation planning:
·
Dr. Howard Frumkin, Director,
National
Center
for Environmental Health, Center for Disease Control (CDC) . He
is the co-author of Urban Sprawl and Public Health: Designing, Planning, and Building for
Healthy Communities.
View Presentation
(Please note that Dr. Frumkin's presentation
does not necessarily represent the views of the CDC. Photos
used in his presentation are for illustrative purposes only)
·
Richard Gilbert, Director of Research, Centre
for Sustainable Transportation, Toronto,
Canada. He is the lead
author of a new report Child
and Youth Friendly Land-Use and Transport Guidelines.
View Presentation
View
report
-
Child
and Youth Friendly Land-Use and Transport Guidelines
·
Kathryn Lawler, Director, Aging
Atlanta
,
Atlanta
Regional Commission.
View Presentation
View
AARP report - Beyond 50.05 A Report to the Nation on
Livable Communities: Creating Environments for Successful Aging
Policy
makers, urban planners, and health professionals are evaluating
the livability of American communities in terms of the
availability of appropriate housing, access to mobility options,
ability to “age in place,” and integration of exercise into
one’s daily routine.
They urge that transportation and land-use policies should
reflect enhanced mobility options, including more accessible
public transportation, walking, and bicycling. New
programs such as Safe Routes To Schools as well as existing programs supporting transit in the new transportation law SAFETEA-LU
will address some of these mobility issues, so the
implementation and funding of these programs is critical.
Transportation and mobility
options have a profound impact on the lifestyles of younger and
older Americans. With
gas prices projected to hit record highs this summer, the
financial impact on vulnerable populations will be acute.
Public transportation can be a
critical source of mobility, provide an affordable transportation
alternative and contribute to personal independence and
quality of life for these vulnerable
generations. Increased
opportunities for walking, biking and use of transit will increase
physical activity, helping to address the health concerns of youth
and elderly.
·
One-sixth
of medical trips by people over 50 were via transit.
·
An AARP survey found that 60
percent of seniors did not have transit within a 10-minute
walk of their home.
·
Almost 64
percent of seniors do not engage in regular physical activity;
and 41 percent are
overweight.
·
According to the Center for Disease Control (CDC),
in 1969, 35 percent of
students lived within a
mile of school and 87
percent of those walked
to school. Today,
only 20 percent of students live
within a mile of school and only about
one-third of them walk.
·
The CDC recently reported that between 1999 and
2004, there has been a significant increase in the prevalence of girls and boys between the
ages 2 and 19 who are overweight (13.8 percent in 1999 to 16.0
percent in 2004 for girls, and 14 percent in 1999 to 18 percent in
2004 for boys).
·
Obesity increases risk for heart disease, cancer,
diabetes, and other major health problems.
In 2000, the U.S. Surgeon General estimated that the
economic cost of obesity was approximately $117 billion.
·
Almost
a third of the current
U.S.
health care expenditures is for older adults. By
2030, the number of older
Americans is expected to double from 35 million to 70 million.
Given this trend, the impact of lack of physical
activity on medical care costs is likely to grow as a result of an
aging population.
This
briefing is open to the public and no reservations are required.
Please feel free to forward this notice.
For more information, contact
Shefali Ranganathan
(sranganathan@eesi.org),
202-662-1883.
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