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Recreational Resources Promote Active Living
The Challenge: A recent study has shown that children living closer to recreational programs and parkland had much lower rates of obesity than children who lived further away, but lower-income cities in Los Angeles County offer considerably fewer recreational resources compared to cities that are predominantly White and more affluent.
Make an impact: Enhancing and expanding recreation programs in low-income communities that have diverse ethnic and racial populations can reduce disparities, encourage physical activity and prevent obesity among residents.
What the findings are about: This policy brief summarizes findings from a ten year longitudinal study showing that lower-income cities in Los Angeles County offer considerably fewer recreational resources compared to cities that are predominantly White and more affluent.
- Lower-income and predominantly minority communities in Los Angeles County have considerably fewer recreational resources compared to cities that are predominantly White and more affluent.
- Recommended strategies for urban planners and public health advocates include creating recreational programs as a lower-cost, highly-targeted approach to preventing obesity within communities most at-risk; increasing the number of recreational programs offered at public and non-profit facilities in high density, low-income neighborhoods and communities of color where they are in short supply; and introducing free and low-cost recreational programming where fees may otherwise limit participation.
- DOWNLOAD "Recreational Resources Promote Active Living" PDF (0.35 MB) Research Briefs & Syntheses
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