PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers find walkable communities are healthier for both mom and baby

2023-08-17
(Press-News.org) DURHAM, N.H. — Pregnant women that live in walkable communities—with more sidewalks, parks and walking paths—not only engage in more physical activity but are also more likely to experience favorable birth outcomes, according to research from the University of New Hampshire.

The study, published in the journal of Economics and Human Biology, found that expectant mothers living in walkable counties tend to engage in more walking and exercise and have fewer issues with premature births, low birth weight, gestational diabetes and hypertension. Walking is often recommended as a safer, more moderate activity for pregnant women, so the authors reasoned that living in a more walkable area could have health benefits for them.

“Gestational diabetes is a growing issue and low birth weight and preterm babies are always a concern, they can just have so many more complications,” said Karen Conway, professor of economics at UNH’s Peter T. Paul College of Business and Economics. “At the end of the day, the data shows walkable communities mean mom and the baby are both in better health.”

Conway and her co-author Andrea Menclova, associate professor of economics at the University of Canterbury, combined walkability measures created by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) with detailed data on physical activity from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) and pregnancy outcomes from the National Vital Statistics Natality Detail Files (NDF). They found that a 10-point increase in the walkability index—equivalent to transitioning from the "least walkable" to the "most walkable" category—is associated with a more than 70-minute increase in weekly exercise among pregnant women. This same change results in an 0.8 percentage point increase in the likelihood of a full-term birth, a 0.07-week extension in gestational age, a 27g increase in birth weight, and a 27% reduction in the likelihood of gestational diabetes and 16% reduction in hypertension. The study did not find a clear connection between walking and its impact on a mother’s weight gain or high birth weight for the baby, known as macrosomia.

“We know that walkability may have other health benefits beyond encouraging more exercise,” said Conway. “Living in an area more suitable for walking gets people outside and interacting with neighbors and relating to others in the community and all of those types of social and intrinsic activities can contribute to better overall health.”

The professors applied the conceptual and empirical tools of economics to see if there was a causal relationship between walkability and pregnancy outcomes. They note that their study is part of a larger area of health economics that uses established data to analyze factors and policies that affect health outcomes, including those during and after pregnancy. The goal is to provide evidence that can help shape policies and inform city and town managers about cost-effective interventions that may help improve health outcomes of residents.

The University of New Hampshire inspires innovation and transforms lives in our state, nation and world. More than 16,000 students from all 50 states and 71 countries engage with an award-winning faculty in top-ranked programs in business, engineering, law, health and human services, liberal arts and the sciences across more than 200 programs of study. A Carnegie Classification R1 institution, UNH partners with NASA, NOAA, NSF and NIH, and received $260 million in competitive external funding in FY21 to further explore and define the frontiers of land, sea and space.

###

 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Oregon State researchers develop novel technique for sniffing out toxic algae blooms

Oregon State researchers develop novel technique for sniffing out toxic algae blooms
2023-08-17
Different cyanobacterial species produce different toxins, said OSU’s Kimberly Halsey, who led the study. Most of them cause gastrointestinal illness and acute skin rashes, and they can be deadly. In 2017, more than 30 cattle died after drinking contaminated water at Junipers Reservoir near Lakeview, Oregon, and blooms particularly pose a threat to dogs entering affected lakes. Even though the research dealt with just one lake and one toxin, the research demonstrates VOCs’ potential in monitoring critical waterways, said Halsey, associate professor of microbiology in the College of Science. She said the study published ...

New research: Political attitudes did not change during COVID-19 pandemic

2023-08-17
EAST LANSING, Mich. – There is a traditional understanding that if someone experiences a threatening event, their attitudes and beliefs will change. Some scholars predict that a threat will cause someone to become more conservative on a variety of issues or that they will become more extreme in their attitudes. However, a new study from researchers at Michigan State University and Tilburg University found that Americans’ political attitudes did not change significantly during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, contrary to ...

RESEARCH ALERT: City of Hope scientists unravel how TET2 gene deficiency fuels development of acute myeloid leukemia

RESEARCH ALERT: City of Hope scientists unravel how TET2 gene deficiency fuels development of acute myeloid leukemia
2023-08-17
FINDINGS Scientists at City of Hope, one of the largest cancer research and treatment organizations in the United States, have identified how low levels of the TET2 gene fuel the rapid growth of acute myeloid leukemia in animal models. Cell Stem Cell recently published the study. A team led by Jianjun Chen, Ph.D., the Simms/Mann Family Foundation Chair in Systems Biology at Beckman Research Institute of City of Hope, found that TET2 deficiency sets off a cascade of biochemical changes that enhance the bone marrow cancer’s ability to spread. These changes ...

Sean Jones appointed Argonne’s Deputy Laboratory Director for Science and Technology

2023-08-17
The U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory has named Sean Jones as deputy laboratory director for science and technology. Jones will begin his new role on October 9, serving as Argonne’s senior science strategist, advisor and chief research officer.  Jones will join Argonne from the National Science Foundation (NSF). In his current role as Assistant Director of the NSF’s Mathematical and Physical Sciences directorate, he oversees a $1.86 billion portfolio that includes five science divisions, domestic and international research facilities, and ...

Carrier receives International Award for Outstanding Leadership

Carrier receives International Award for Outstanding Leadership
2023-08-17
Julie Carrier, professor and head of the University of Tennessee Department of Biosystems Engineering and Soil Science, was awarded the James R. and Karen A. Gilley Academic Leadership Award during the annual international meeting of the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers (ASABE) in July. The award was given in recognition of Carrier’s exceptional leadership as department head as well as her ongoing dedication to furthering the UT Institute of Agriculture’s mission to provide research and extension ...

Policies favoring high-volume hospitals may disadvantage rural cancer patients

Policies favoring high-volume hospitals may disadvantage rural cancer patients
2023-08-17
PITTSBURGH, Aug. 17, 2023 – Patients with cancer who live in rural Pennsylvania counties appear to know that they may have better outcomes if they receive their cancer surgery at a hospital that performs a high volume of those surgeries, but still opt for lower volume hospitals closer to home when their cancer is likely less complex, according to a new analysis published today in JCO Oncology Practice by health policy scientists at the University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health. With a shortage of experienced surgeons in rural America and rural ...

Racial and ethnic differences in gut microbiome emerge at 3 months old

Racial and ethnic differences in gut microbiome emerge at 3 months old
2023-08-17
Gut microbiome variation associated with race and ethnicity arises after three months of age and persists through childhood, according to a new study published August 17th in the open access journal PLOS Biology by Elizabeth K. Mallott of Washington University in St. Louis, US, Seth Bordenstein of Pennsylvania State University, US, and colleagues. Human microbiome variation has been linked to the incidence, prevalence and mortality of many diseases and is known to associate with race and ethnicity in the United States. However, in this context race and ethnicity are considered proxies for inequitable exposure to social and environmental determinants of health due to structural racism. ...

Economist group argues for scientific experimentation in environmental policymaking

2023-08-17
Environmental regulators and other organizations should do more scientific experimentation to inform natural resource policy, according to an international group of economists that includes University of Wyoming researchers. In a new paper in the prestigious journal Science, the economists say more frequent use of up-front experiments would result in more effective environmental policymaking in areas ranging from pollution control to timber harvesting across the world. “Although formal experimentation is a cornerstone of science and is increasingly embedded in nonenvironmental social programs, it is virtually absent in environmental ...

LRT, REM, mass transit projects and their fuzzy reality

LRT, REM, mass transit projects and their fuzzy reality
2023-08-17
The city of Gatineau is planning a tramway network that will link up with Ottawa, where the Light Rail Transit (LRT) continues to be bogged down by major mishaps. With Montreal’s new Réseau express métropolitain (REM) light transit system experiencing its own hiccups to start, how can cities looking to incorporate mass transport systems successfully launch such endeavors while avoiding project failures and years of misfortune? New research from a University of Ottawa professor suggests project leaders not overlook the “F” word. Telfer School of Management professor Lavagnon Ika found a lack of full appreciation ...

You’re reading this because an asteroid killed the dinosaurs, allowing mammals to dominate the Earth. But why?

2023-08-17
Almost 66 million years ago, an asteroid struck the Earth, killing all non-avian dinosaurs and allowing mammals to dominate. But just how did we evolve from rat-like creatures running between the feet of dinosaurs to take over their ecological niches? Dr. Kendra Chritz, assistant professor in the UBC department of earth, ocean and atmospheric sciences, aims to find out. Dr. Chritz is co-leading a new multi-million-dollar research project to learn how ecosystems and organisms recover after a catastrophic, climate-changing event. She explains in this Q&A that clues may lie in the fossilized teeth of mammals. Why don’t we know much about how mammals ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Trial showing ivermectin safety in small children could spur progress against several neglected tropical diseases

Human approach is hypothesized to be superior to technology for supportive cancer care according to new data in JNCCN

Mount Sinai’s Jean-Frédéric Colombel, MD, to deliver the 31st Anatomy Lesson in Amsterdam, highlighting global efforts to prevent and cure Crohn’s disease

Breast cancer case study could inform clinical trials

Cherie Zachary, MD, installed as ACAAI President

Billions live in environments that violate human rights

Thyroid gland new possible target for prostate cancer treatment

New study reveals devastating impact of cane toads approaching the Pilbara

COP30: Global nature goals at risk as conservation projects quietly fail

New treatment for combating iron deficiency more effectively

A new AI-powered method to automate material analysis and design

Security flaws in portable genetic sequencers risk leaking private DNA data

‘Roadmap’ shows the environmental impact of AI data center boom

Scientists discover chameleon’s telephone-cord-like optic nerves once overlooked by Aristotle and Newton

One enzyme could be behind alcohol addiction and liver disease

Neanderthal DNA helps explain how faces form

New nasal vaccine has potential to transform respiratory disease prevention

How plastics grip metals at the atomic scale

Human impact on Amazon forests is transforming its ecological functions and evolutionary history

Could a liquid biopsy test lead to earlier diagnoses for numerous cancer types?

Link found between chronic fatigue and abnormal breathing could lead to new treatments

Beauty and fear

Between solstices and equinoxes

New study gives people with eczema freedom to choose how often to bathe

Children’s dental health still very poor despite interventions 

Hospital patients who feel short of breath are six times more likely to die

Existing evidence does not clearly link paracetamol use during pregnancy with autism or ADHD in children

Should kids be screened for high cholesterol genes?

Weight loss drugs don’t increase the risk of pancreatitis or adverse cardiac events in patients with high triglycerides

Major international study confirms that beta-blockers are no longer needed in post-infarction patients with normal heart function

[Press-News.org] Researchers find walkable communities are healthier for both mom and baby