The Medical Journal of Australia has an interesting article, “The way we live in our cities”,
by Anthony Capon that outlines the health and environmental sustainability issues of living in Australian cities. See abstract below. Full article available (free) at http://www.mja.com.au/public/issues/187_11_031207/cap11053_fm.html.
ABSTRACT:
During 2007, the human species became predominantly urban: Australia is highly urbanised, and health varies within Australian cities.
Australian urban life is characterised by sedentariness, excess food intake, reliance on cars for transport, a high level of exposure to media and marketing messages, and a consumer culture.
These characteristics are linked to obesity, diabetes, heart disease, some cancers, chronic respiratory disease, injury, depression and anxiety.
The evolution of cities has been characterised as a four-stage process: poverty, industrial, consumption and eco-city. Each stage but the last has defining health disorders.
Transition to healthy and sustainable cities requires infrastructure investment in new urban areas (including mass transit, education and health services), better conditions for walking and cycling, access to healthy food and encouragement of suburban economic development.
There is a role for everyone in the transition to healthy and sustainable cities.
Full article available (free) at http://www.mja.com.au/public/issues/187_11_031207/cap11053_fm.html.
Related Posts
- Event - The State of Australian Cities Conference 2007
- Research - ACF press release about environment and health costs
- Research - Water research from CSIRO
- Research - RMIT says housing can be affordable and sustainable
- Research - Retrofitting for sustainability
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