Car travel contributes to air pollution, a major cause of heart and lung diseases including asthma attacks. Beyond this, it limits children s opportunities for physical activity, hindering their development and mental health, and increasing their risk of obesity and chronic illnesses.
Despite UK guidelines recommending a daily average of 60 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity for school-aged children and adolescents, less than half (45%) of children aged 5-16 met these levels in 2021. One in three children aged 10-11 in the UK are overweight or obese.
In April 2019, London introduced the ULEZ to help improve air quality by reducing the number of vehicles on the road that do not meet emissions standards. According to Transport for London, the central London ULEZ reduced harmful nitrogen oxides by 35% and particulate matter by 15% in central London within the first 10 months of its introduction.
In a study published today in the International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity, a team led by researchers at the University of Cambridge and Queen Mary University of London examined the impact of the ULEZ on how children travelled to school. The research was part of the CHILL study (Children’s Health in London and Luton).
The study examined data from almost 2,000 children aged six to nine years attending 84 primary schools in London and the control area, Luton. 44 schools were located with catchment areas within or bordering London’s ULEZ, and these were compared to a similar number in Luton and Dunstable (acting as a comparison group). The inclusion of the comparison site enabled the researchers to draw more robust conclusions and increased confidence in attributing the observed changes to the introduction of the ULEZ.
The researchers collected data from the period June 2018 to April 2019, prior to ULEZ implementation, and again in the period June 2019 to March 2020, the year after implementation of the ULEZ but prior to COVID-19-related school closures.
Among those children in London who travelled by car prior to the introduction of the ULEZ, four in 10 (42%) switched to active modes, while one in 20 (5%) switched from active to inactive modes.
In contrast, only two in ten (20%) children in Luton swapped from car travel to active modes, while a similar number (21%) switched from active to car travel. This means that children in London within the ULEZ were 3.6 times as likely to shift from travelling by car to active travel modes compared to those children in Luton and far less likely (0.11 times) to switch to inactive modes.
The impact of the ULEZ on switching to active travel modes was strongest for those children living more than half a mile (0.78km) from school. This was probably because many children who live closer to school already walked or cycled to school prior to the ULEZ and therefore there was more potential for change in those living further away from their school.
The study’s first author, Dr Christina Xiao from the Medical Research Council (MRC) Epidemiology Unit at the University of Cambridge, said: “The introduction of the ULEZ was associated with positive changes in how children travelled to school, with a much larger number of children moving from inactive to active modes of transport in London than in Luton.
“Given children s heightened vulnerability to air pollution and the critical role of physical activity for their health and development, financial disincentives for car use could encourage healthier travel habits among this young population, even if they do not necessarily target them.”
Joint senior author Dr Jenna Panter from the MRC Epidemiology Unit, University of Cambridge, said: “The previous government was committed to increasing the share of children walking to school by 2025 and we hope the new government will follow suit. Changing the way children travel to school can have significant effects on their levels of physical activity at the same time as bringing other co-benefits like improving congestion and air quality, as about a quarter of car trips during peak morning hours in London are made for school drop-offs.”
After ULEZ was introduced in Central London, the total number of vehicles on the roads fell by 9%, and by one-third (34%) for vehicles that failed to meet the required exhaust emission standards, with no clear evidence of traffic moving instead to nearby areas.
Joint senior author Professor Chris Griffiths from the Wolfson Institute of Population Health, Queen Mary University of London, said: “Establishing healthy habits early is critical to healthy adulthood and the prevention of disabling long term illness, especially obesity and the crippling diseases associated with it. The robust design of our study, with Luton as a comparator area, strongly suggests the ULEZ is driving this switch to active travel. This is evidence that Clean Air Zone intervention programmes aimed at reducing air pollution have the potential to also improve overall public health by addressing key factors that contribute to illness.”
Due to the introduction of COVID-19 restrictions in late March 2020, the study was paused in 2020/2021 and results are only reported for the first year of follow-up. However, as both London and Luton, the study areas, were similarly affected, the researchers believe this disruption is unlikely to have affected the results. The study has restarted following up with the children to examine the longer-term impacts of the ULEZ. This will identify if the changes they observed in the year following the introduction of the ULEZ persist.
The study was conducted in collaboration with Queen Mary University of London, Imperial College, University of Bedfordshire, University of Edinburgh, University of Oxford and University of Southern California and funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research Public Health Research (NIHR), NIHR Applied Research Collaboration North Thames, and Cambridge Trust.
Reference
Xiao, C et al. Children’s Health in London and Luton (CHILL) cohort: A 12-month natural experimental study of the effects of the Ultra Low Emission Zone on children’s travel to school. IJBNPA; 5 Sept DOI: 10.1186/s12966-024-01621-7
Four in ten children in Central London who travelled to school by car switched to more active modes of transport, such as walking, cycling, or public transport, following the introduction of the Ultra-Low Emission Zone (ULEZ), according to new research. In the comparison area with no ULEZ, Luton, only two in ten children made this switch over the same period.
Changing the way children travel to school can have significant effects on their levels of physical activity at the same time as bringing other co-benefits like improving congestion and air qualityJenna PanterMatt BrownULEZ signs (cropped)
The text in this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Images, including our videos, are Copyright ©University of Cambridge and licensors/contributors as identified. All rights reserved. We make our image and video content available in a number of ways – on our main website under its Terms and conditions, and on a range of channels including social media that permit your use and sharing of our content under their respective Terms.
YesLicence type: Attribution
Thursday 19 September 2024
Cambridge - 15 days ago
Children switch to walking and cycling to school after introduction of London’s Ultra-Low Emission Zone
Latest News
University of California (Riverside) - World University Rankings - Masters In Business Analytics 2025
- topuniversitiesUniversity of Louisville - World University Rankings - Masters In Business Analytics 2025
- topuniversitiesUniversity of South Florida (Muma) - World University Rankings - Masters In Business Analytics 2025
- topuniversitiesWest Texas A M University - World University Rankings - Masters In Business Analytics 2025
- topuniversitiesWorcester Polytechnic Institute (Foisie) - World University Rankings - Masters In Business Analytics 2025
- topuniversitiesWoxsen School of Business - World University Rankings - Masters In Business Analytics 2025
- topuniversitiesXi an Jiaotong Liverpool University - World University Rankings - Masters In Business Analytics 2025
- topuniversitiesHKU tops local universities with thirty-five young scientists awarded funding from National Natural Science Foundation of China
- HongkongShalini Randeria Delivers Address on Demographic Panics and Human Rights for the Royal Society of Edinburgh
- Central EuropeanBuilding better batteries key to Western’s role in growing electric vehicle industry
- Western OntarioDepartment of Philosophy Colloquium - Graham Kennedy Memorial Lecture - Christopher Ba Thi Nguyen
- Queen’sUMass Amherst launches early college program giving high school students opportunities to earn college credit for free
- MassachusettsUConn School of Pharmacy a Key Partner in Fight Against Opioid Epidemic Deaths in Connecticut
- ConnecticutPrinceton launches digital access guides for more than 200 buildings, advancing physical accessibility on campus
- PrincetonThis how you dated before there were apps and when you didn’t already know what each other looked like naked
- HarvardLa sfida del clima che cambia tra modelli matematici e agricoltura: a Firenze due lezioni divulgative di Roberto Buizza e Pierdomenico Perata, professori ordinari della Scuola Sant Anna, invitati dall Accademia toscana di scienze e lettere La Colombaria
- Sant’AnnaMemorial Concert Honoring the Late Peter Bagley to Draw 120 Alumni for Saturday Performance
- ConnecticutThe University of Warwick s Innovation Success Highlighted in Latest Knowledge Exchange Framework (KEF) Assessment
- WarwickHy.Summit.Rhein.Ruhr stärkt die Region auf dem Weg zu der deutschen Wasserstoff-Metropole
- Duisburg-EssenMonkey see, monkey know: Apes understand reasons behind each other’s actions, says new University of Warwick research
- WarwickNew structural transformation phenomenon can break the way in searching for novel materials
- Stockholm“Iran: decades of unsustainable water use has dried up lakes and caused environmental destruction”
- StockholmMedical school lecturer receives prestigious teaching award for improving curriculum accessibility
- KeeleRicerca d’avanguardia, il Consiglio Europeo della Ricerca finanzia con un ERC Starting Grant il progetto I-BOT per lo sviluppo di microrobot in grado di navigare e di impiantarsi in modo non invasivo e controllato nel corpo umano
- Sant’AnnaIngenuity Labs Invited Lecture: Michael Lipsett, Robotic Systems for Environmental Monitoring
- Queen’sAlum Roars into Children’s Toy Market with Colorful Plush Dinosaurs, Plans for Complementary Books
- Connecticut‘Young Academy Leiden wants to stand up for young researchers, especially in difficult times’
- LeidenTue, 17 Sep 2024 00:00:00 UTC Nobel Laureate in Economics Professor James J. Heckman joins CUHK and CUHK-Shenzhen as Distinguished Professor-at-Large
- Hong KongThe last Research Traineeship programme has ended for now: ‘We’ll bring it back as soon as we can’
- LeidenNew equity funding and industry collaboration helps AI-Sight advance its unique diabetic retinopathy technology
- LiverpoolHKU Receives HK$16 Million from Tigillus Foundation in Support of Research on Chinese History through the Establishment of an Endowed Professorship and an Academic Fund
- HongkongHKU Business School Pilot Forum: Navigating Key Economic Discussions in China and Exploring New Opportunities for Chinese Enterprises Going Global
- HongkongHKU to implement a new round of special arrangements for tourist flow management from 28 September to 10 October
- HongkongNew distinguished professorship at Candler School of Theology marks investment in ‘Emory’s soul’
- Emory Sources
Barcelona
Copenhagen
Gordon
Aberdeen
acenet
Agricultural Sciences
Alabama
Arizona
Autonomous
Bath
Bergen
Bern
Bloomington
Boston
Bozen-Bolzano
Brandeis
Buffalo
Calgary
Cambridge
Central European
Charité
Chester
Colorado Boulder
Connecticut
Copenhagen
Duisburg-Essen
Duke
Dundee
École
Eindhoven
Emory
Estadual de Campinas
Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Florida
Frankfurt am Main
Galway
Geneva
Goethe
Groningen
Harvard
Hawai’i at Mānoa
Hong Kong
Hongkong
Imperial
James Cook
Keele
Kingston
KTH
Laval
Leiden
Liège
Liverpool
Lomonosov Moscow
Luxembourg
Macquarie
Mancunion
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
MMU
Montreal
Nacional de Colombia
Newcastle
Northampton
Nuremberg
Ohio
Ottawa
Oxford
Paris-Sud
Princeton
Purdue
qswownews
Quaid-i-Azam
Queensland
Queen’s
Radboud
Riverside
Ruhr
Rush
Rutgers
RWTH Aachen
Santa Barbara
Santa Cruz
Sant’Anna
São Paulo
Sciences Po
Scuola
SOAS
South Australia
South Florida
Southampton
St-andrews
St. Louis
Stanford
Stirling
Stockholm
Stony Brook
Stuttgart
Surrey
Sussex
SUU
Swansea
Sydney
Syracuse
Texas
Texas A&M
Texas at Dallas
Tokyo
topuniversities
Trento
Tufts
Ulm
USnews/Education
Utah
Utrecht
Wageningen
Waikato
Warwick
Waseda
Washington
Western Australia
Western Ontario
Wilhelms-University Munster
William & Mary
Wollongong
Würzburg
Yale
Yeshiva
⁞
Copenhagen
Gordon
Aberdeen
acenet
Agricultural Sciences
Alabama
Arizona
Autonomous
Bath
Bergen
Bern
Bloomington
Boston
Bozen-Bolzano
Brandeis
Buffalo
Calgary
Cambridge
Central European
Charité
Chester
Colorado Boulder
Connecticut
Copenhagen
Duisburg-Essen
Duke
Dundee
École
Eindhoven
Emory
Estadual de Campinas
Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Florida
Frankfurt am Main
Galway
Geneva
Goethe
Groningen
Harvard
Hawai’i at Mānoa
Hong Kong
Hongkong
Imperial
James Cook
Keele
Kingston
KTH
Laval
Leiden
Liège
Liverpool
Lomonosov Moscow
Luxembourg
Macquarie
Mancunion
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
MMU
Montreal
Nacional de Colombia
Newcastle
Northampton
Nuremberg
Ohio
Ottawa
Oxford
Paris-Sud
Princeton
Purdue
qswownews
Quaid-i-Azam
Queensland
Queen’s
Radboud
Riverside
Ruhr
Rush
Rutgers
RWTH Aachen
Santa Barbara
Santa Cruz
Sant’Anna
São Paulo
Sciences Po
Scuola
SOAS
South Australia
South Florida
Southampton
St-andrews
St. Louis
Stanford
Stirling
Stockholm
Stony Brook
Stuttgart
Surrey
Sussex
SUU
Swansea
Sydney
Syracuse
Texas
Texas A&M
Texas at Dallas
Tokyo
topuniversities
Trento
Tufts
Ulm
USnews/Education
Utah
Utrecht
Wageningen
Waikato
Warwick
Waseda
Washington
Western Australia
Western Ontario
Wilhelms-University Munster
William & Mary
Wollongong
Würzburg
Yale
Yeshiva