Patient Care Access News

Racial Disparities Apparent in Benefits to Walkability, Neighborhood SDOH

Institutional racism, like redlining policies, has created an inverse impact of walkability and neighborhood SDOH for Black, Hispanic, and Asian people.

walkability supports better obesity management and prevention but there are racial disparities in who sees those benefits

Source: Getty Images

By Sara Heath

- Neighborhood walkability has the potential to boost physical activity and improve BMI, two key factors for addressing obesity. But neighborhood conditions like safety, another key element of neighborhood SDOH, can dampen those impacts and disproportionately impact populations of color, according to new data from the Boston University School of Public Health.

The study, published in the journal Obesity, found that despite living in neighborhoods with higher walkability scores, Black, Hispanic, and Asian people were less likely to engage in physical activity near their homes.

The researchers said this trend was tied to differences in other built environmental factors, like perceived safety and neighborhood quality, that could discourage individuals from going outside near their homes.