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Active Commuting to and from School among Swedish Children—A National and Regional Study

Johansson, Klara; Hasselberg, Marie; & Laflamme, Lucie. (2011). Active Commuting to and from School among Swedish Children—A National and Regional Study. The European Journal of Public Health, 22(2), 209-214.

Johansson, Klara; Hasselberg, Marie; & Laflamme, Lucie. (2011). Active Commuting to and from School among Swedish Children—A National and Regional Study. The European Journal of Public Health, 22(2), 209-214.

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Background: Active commuting to school by walking or cycling can have positive impact on children’s health and development. The study investigates the prevalence of active commuting to school in Sweden, a setting where it is facilitated and promoted; and how active commuting varies according to socio-demographic and socio-economic characteristics. Methods: Self-reports from a national sample of Swedish children (11- to 15-year-olds, n = 4415) and a regional one from Stockholm County (13-year-olds, n = 1008) on transport to school were compared. The association that active commuting has with socio-demographic (gender, school grade, Swedish origin, type of housing, urbanicity in the local area), and socio-economic characteristics (household socio-economic status, family car ownership) was studied using logistic regression, controlling for car ownership and urbanicity, respectively. Results: Active commuting was high (62.9% in the national sample) but decreased with age—76% at the age of 11 years, 62% at the age of 13 years and 50% at the age of 15 years—whereas public transport increased (19–43%). Living in an apartment or row-house (compared with detached house) and living in a medium-sized city (compared with a metropolitan area) was associated with active commuting. In urban areas, active commuting was more common in worker households compared with intermediate- to high-level salaried employees. Conclusion: Active commuting is common but decreases with age. Active commuting differed based on housing and urbanicity but not based on gender or Swedish origin, and impact of socio-economic factors differed depending on level of urbanicity.




JOUR



Johansson, Klara
Hasselberg, Marie
Laflamme, Lucie



2011


The European Journal of Public Health

22

2

209-214






1101-1262

10.1093/eurpub/ckr042



1079