Green Exercise During the Pandemic (08-08-22)
Das and Gailey’s work confirms the value of exercising in green environments via data collected during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Das and Gailey’s work confirms the value of exercising in green environments via data collected during the COVID-19 pandemic.
What neighborhoods can kids and their parents benefit from being in? Hunter and colleagues set out to answer this question.
Bettering lives, now and in the future
Research by Wali and teammates confirms that walkability boosts health.
Work by a research team lead by Van Den Eeden provides additional evidence that living near green spaces is good for our health.
Research indicates that urban design is affecting neighborhood temperatures.
Living near a green area has been linked to less likelihood of having a stroke.
Howell and Booth link neighborhood walkability and the presence of outdoor amenities to better health and fewer cases of diabetes among residents.
Reid, Rieves, and Carlson evaluated the effects of access to greenspace on mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Hunter and colleagues studied how neighborhood design influences resident actions.