| Literature DB >> 27842531 |
Terry T K Huang1,2, Katarzyna E Wyka3, Emily B Ferris3, Jennifer Gardner4, Kelly R Evenson5, Devanshi Tripathi3, Gabriel Martinez Soto3, Matthew S Cato3, Jon Moon6, Julia Wagner4, Joan M Dorn7, Diane J Catellier8, Lorna E Thorpe3,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The built environment plays a critical role in promoting physical activity and health. The association between parks, as a key attribute of the built environment, and physical activity, however, remains inconclusive. This project leverages a natural experiment opportunity to assess the impact of the Community Parks Initiative (CPI), a citywide park redesign and renovation effort in New York City, on physical activity, park usage, psychosocial and mental health, and community wellbeing.Entities:
Keywords: Built environment; Mental health; Natural experiment; Parks; Physical activity; Planning; Recreation
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27842531 PMCID: PMC5109670 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-3822-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Study theoretical framework
Fig. 2Map of study neighborhood sites
Study design and measurement timeline, Physical Activity and Redesigned Community Spaces (PARCS) Study – New York City
| 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | Test | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20 Intervention Parks (Phase 1) | A |
| A | FS | A | Comparison of 3-year post-renovation outcomes | |||||||
| 10 Intervention Parks (Phase 2) | A |
| A | FS | A | ||||||||
| vs | |||||||||||||
| 20 Control Parks | A | A | FS | A | |||||||||
Note. A accelerometry, FS full survey, O SOPARC (direct park observation), SS short survey (stress/quality of life). Shaded X = renovated parks reopening
Phase 1 and 2 intervention parks will be combined for analysis relative to control parks
Comparison of existing (Baseline/Control) and renovated (Intervention) features
|
| |
| Existing | Renovated |
| • Out of date sports courts with cracked pavement and missing features | • Refurbished and reconstructed basketball, handball, tennis and other courts, including regulation sizes |
| • Asphalted play areas | • Synthetic turf conversions and multi-purpose fields |
| • Old-fashioned spray showers and mini pools | • Contemporary water feature elements |
| • Play equipment dating from 1960s–1990s | • Playground equipment meeting current safety and design standards, including ADA |
| • No or closed comfort station | • Refurbished or new construction comfort station meeting ADA standards |
| • Poorly configured benches and picnic tables in need of repair | • New tables, i.e. for chess, picnics; new benches and seating for passive recreation |
| • Minimal and unplanted horticultural beds and trees | • Increased plantings and horticulture |
| • Adult fitness equipment | |
| • Performance and community event spaces | |
| • Skate park features | |
| • Green infrastructure components, i.e. rain gardens, bioswales, subsurface retention systems, permeable surfaces | |
| • Lower, more welcoming fences | |
| • New lighting fixtures | |
|
| |
| Existing | Renovated |
| • Citywide and Borough-organized recreational programming | • Dedicated 6-month Playground Associates staffing all-day programs at capital renovation sites |
| • Minimal or no direct community engagement specific to capital program sites | • Expanded outreach and community engagement staff dedicated to program neighborhoods |
| • Limited stakeholder engagement in capital process | • Held public scoping meetings to gather input on design program and park use with more than 1,100 attendees across 30+ sites |
Socio-demographic characteristics of study sites
| Citywide | Intervention Sites ( | Control Sites ( | Difference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total population | 8,175,133 | 860,098 | 515,626 | 344,472 |
| Population over 18 years | 78.4% | 76.2% | 76.9% | −0.7% |
| White residents | 33.3% | 18.5% | 16.1% | 2.3% |
| Black residents | 22.8% | 25.5% | 31.6% | −6.1% |
| Asian residents | 12.6% | 14.2% | 13.1% | 1.1% |
| Hispanic residents | 28.6% | 39.7% | 37.2% | 2.5% |
| Population change | 2.1% | 3.6% | 3.2% | 0.4% |
| Population living below poverty line | 20.3% | 30.2% | 27.6% | 2.6% |
Data in Table 3 are publicly available data
Key measures
|
|
|
|---|---|
| Physical activity (PA, total volume) | • Accelerometry data (ActiGraph GT3X-BT) |
| PA in study parks | • GPS data (ActiPalTM app) |
| Improvements in park features, programs and quality (direct observation) | • SOPARC: accessible, usable, equipped, supervised, organized activity, dark, empty [ |
| Park usage and engagement | • Direct observation through SOPARC: count of park users, gender, age, level of PA [ |
| Park satisfaction and perception | • Accessibility, well kept, safety, ability to relax in park, ability to use for recreational purposes, walking distance, sufficient in neighborhood [ |
| Psychosocial/mental health | • Perceived Stress Scale [ |
| Community wellbeing | • Social cohesion [ |
| Demographic information | • Age, sex, gender identification, income level, employment status, education level, marital status, number of children, size of household, language spoken at home, length of residency in neighborhood, smoking status, sexual orientation [ |
| Weather | • Daily high and low temperatures, humidity and rain/sun conditions |