SUNDAY, July 4 (HealthDay News) -- The health benefits of
cycling in an urban environment outweigh risks posed by air
pollution and accidents, a new study has concluded.
Researchers analyzed data from international studies on the
benefits of exercise and the threats posed by vehicle exhaust and
traffic hazards. They then estimated what the health impact would
be if 500,000 Dutch adults switched from driving to cycling for one
round trip of roughly five to nine miles a day.
The study found that cycling even for a short period of time in
traffic can lead to significant exposure to components of car
exhaust, such as tiny particles and soot, that may contribute to
respiratory and heart problems. Because cyclists tend to breathe
about twice as deeply as car drivers, they inhale larger amounts of
air pollutants.
The researchers also calculated the risk of dying in a traffic
accident as about four times greater per half-mile traveled for
cyclists than for car drivers.
But they determined that the health benefits for cyclists in The
Netherlands were at least nine times greater than the hazards. By
switching from driving to cycling, people would, on average, live
three to 14 months longer because of increased physical activity.
The risks they would face would be potentially losing 0.8 to 40
days of life because of increased exposure to air pollution and an
average of five to nine days from a fatal traffic accident.
The findings were reported online June 30 in
Environmental Health Perspectives.
Switching to cycling was also found to benefit public health
because it would eliminate 500,000 car trips a day, leading to a
reduction in air pollution, the researchers noted in a news release
from the publisher.
More information
The California Department of Transportation offers
bicycle safety tips.