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The Benefits of Public Transportation

The Route to Better Personal Health

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Today, more than ever before, the way Americans travel impacts our health. As more and more vehicles crowd onto the nation’s roadways, they threaten our physical and mental well-being in a variety of ways, as well as the ability of healthcare providers to deliver critical services.

America’s public transportation systems can play a vital role in creating a healthier nation. Increased investment in and use of public transportation can directly:

  • Improve and protect the personal health of all Americans

  • Assure better access to essential medical services

  • Create opportunities for substantial cost savings in healthcare delivery

Personal health and well-being, a goal shared by all Americans, has become an issue of major national concern. Public transportation improves personal health and access to healthcare, and thus:

  • Protects personal freedom, choice and mobility

  • Enhances access to opportunity

  • Enables economic prosperity

  • Protects our communities and the natural environment

Public Transportation Protects Personal Health

Current trends in personal travel threaten Americans’ health, but more and better use of public transportation can reduce these threats.

The Health Threat: Air Pollution

Over 140 million Americans, 25 percent of whom are children, live, work and play in areas where air quality does not meet national standards.(1, 2) Harmful motor vehicle emissions account for between 25 and 51 percent of the air pollutants in these non-attainment areas. From 2000 to 2002, the number of recorded high-ozone days increased 18.5 percent. (2)

The health effects of mobile source pollution can be severe and even life threatening, particularly to children, older adults and adults with respiratory illnesses.

  • Air pollution claims 70,000 lives a year, nearly twice the number killed in traffic accidents. (3)

  • The American Lung Association estimated that, as far back as 1993-94, high levels of ozone in 13 cities resulted in 10,000 to 15,000 additional hospital admissions and 30,000 to 50,000 additional emergency room visits. (4)

  • Older residents in cities with the worst air pollution are 20 percent more likely to seek hospital care for respiratory illnesses. (5)

  • The annual cost of health damage from motor vehicle pollution is estimated to be between $29 billion and $530 billion. (6)

  • From 1980 through 1995, the asthma rate among children doubled from 2.3 million to 5.5 million, reaching epidemic proportions in the U.S. Air pollution is a primary cause. (7, 8)

Public Transportation Responds

Increased availability and use of public transportation dramatically reduces motor vehicle emissions.

  • Compared with private vehicles, public transportation produces, on average, per passenger mile, 95 percent less carbon monoxide, 92 percent fewer volatile organic compounds, 45 percent less carbon dioxide and 48 percent less nitrogen oxide. (9)

  • During the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games, expanded transportation services reduced morning peak auto use by 22.5 percent and reduced mobile source emissions. There was a 44.1 percent reduction in asthma-related medical visits among HMO enrollees. (10, 11)

Emissions Reductions from Public Transportation Use

Source: Shapiro, Robert J. et al, Conserving Energy and Preserving the Environment: The Role of Public Transportation, July 2002

The Health Threat: Obesity, Inactivity and Suburban Sprawl

Nearly 65 percent of U.S. adults are overweight; 30 percent are obese. (12) Obesity makes people susceptible to illnesses and chronic health conditions, leading to less productive and less enjoyable lifestyles and increased healthcare costs. (14) Obesity leads to 300,000 deaths a year, (13) and direct healthcare costs of obesity and physical inactivity were estimated to exceed $117 billion in 2000.(13) The U.S. Surgeon General, Dr. David Stacher, has warned that obesity may soon result in as much preventable disease and death in the U.S. as smoking. (12, 13)

Obesity and declining physical fitness can be associated with inactive, sedentary, auto-dependent lifestyles. In sprawling urban and suburban areas where few travel options are available, cars are now used for 80 percent of trips less than one mile in length. (15)

Public Transportation Responds

Transit-friendly, walkable communities reduce reliance on motor vehicles and promote higher levels of physical activity. These more traditional urban settings may generate half the automobile trips of similarly sized modern-day suburbs.15 Studies show that a single mile of transit travel can substitute for five to seven miles of auto travel in such settings. (16)

As a result, the role of community design in promoting more active lifestyles and alternatives to motor vehicle use has become much more significant in the effort to improve the health of all Americans.

The Health Threat: Accidents and Injuries

In 2000, nearly 42,000 people died in vehicle crashes and another 3.2 million were injured. (17) Taken as a whole, the pain, suffering, cost of care, lost income and lost productivity from vehicle accidents remains one of the nation’s most severe and persistent public health problems, costing the nation $200 billion annually. (18) Exposure to roadway accidents and injury is linked directly to continuing increases in vehicle-miles traveled, which, between 1980 and 2000, grew more than three times faster than the population. (19)

Public Transportation Responds

All modes of public transportation are far safer than personal vehicles.

  • Public transportation trips result in 190,000 fewer deaths, injuries and accidents annually than trips by car, providing $ billion to $5 billion in safety benefits, based on 1994 data. (20)

  • Riding the bus is 170 times safer than automobile travel, according to National Safety Council data. (21)

The Health Threat: Road Stress

The average American driver may spend over 450 hours each year—equal to nearly 11 workweeks — behind the wheel. (22) The result: a mounting level of frustration, stress, anger and hostility that causes illness, reduces productivity in the workplace and degrades the quality of life at home. (23) The stress of driving in congested conditions is linked directly to a long list of health problems, including cardiovascular disease, suppressed immune system functioning and strokes, (23, 24, 25) as well as more headaches, colds and flu. (26)

Public Transportation Responds

Studies indicate that less travel time, more predictability, enhanced control and less effort required to make a trip reduces the stress levels and negative health effects associated with driving. (23) Public transportation provides obvious advantages in all of these dimensions, as well as opportunities to read and relax that are not available to drivers stranded in traffic. Expanding and enhancing public transportation provides an opportunity to decrease stress and its negative impacts on our health.

Public Transportation Provides Access to Healthcare Services

For many Americans, inadequate transportation severely limits access to essential medical care.

Limited access is a particular problem among low-income and minority households.28 As many as four million children in families with incomes under $50,000 a year miss essential doctor appointments because of inadequate transportation. (27)

The role of public transportation and transit agencies in providing access to essential healthcare is growing.

  • In Cincinnati, 60 percent of the patients using Good Samaritan Hospital’s clinics use public transportation to access the clinics. (29) Tri-Met in Portland, OR, carries 65 percent of non-emergency Medicaid trips. (30)

  • The Metropolitan Tulsa Transit Authority (MTTA) coordinates Medicaid transportation statewide, handling 400 calls a day. (31) The Rhode Island Public Transit Authority (RIPTA) also coordinates Medicaid transportation statewide, using existing bus routes for 98 percent of the trips. (32)

“It seems imperative that new transportation options be developed and implemented in order to help alleviate the public health problems related to worsening air quality in the United States.”

Richard J. Jackson, MD, Director

National Center for Environmental Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (10)

Public Transportation Lowers Healthcare Costs

The cost of transportation to and from medical treatment is staggering, and growing each year. Medicaid and Medicare services pay nearly $3.5 billion a year to provide transportation to non-emergency medical treatment. (34) In 2000, over 100 million Medicaid trips were funded at an average cost of $16 per trip. (34) More than half of Medicare ambulance trips (as many as 90 percent in rural areas) may be for non-emergencies at a cost that can exceed $500 per trip. (35, 36)

Increased reliance on public transportation for travel to medical treatment is saving the nation’s healthcare system millions of dollars and can save millions more—if transit services are enhanced and expanded.

  • The Oklahoma Healthcare Authority pays Tulsa’s MTTA an average of only $2.19 per client per month to operate all nonemergency Medicaid transportation in the state. (31)

  • In Rhode Island, RIPTA’s bus and paratransit service provides non-emergency transportation to all Medicaid recipients with an average cost of 45 cents per trip, the lowest in the country. (32)

  • In Florida, the Metro-Dade Transit Agency provides Medicaid recipients with a monthly pass that provides unlimited rides to clients, including trips for medical care. The pass saves the Medicaid program over $600,000 a month, provides added revenue to Metro-Dade Transit, and saves $10 million a year in Metro-Dade paratransit costs. (36)

As concern over the availability and cost of healthcare mounts, the benefits of enhanced and expanded public transportation must be considered. Increased investment in public transportation is a key strategy for improving the health and well-being of all Americans, and in attaining the greatest benefit from the nation’s healthcare network.

Works Cited

  1. www.epa.gov/airs/nonattn.html

  2. American Lung Association, State of the Air 2002 Report, Executive Summary, www.lungusa.org/air2001/summary02.html

  3. Fischlowitz-Roberts, Bernie, Air Pollution Fatalities Now Exceed Traffic Fatalities by 3 to 1, Earth Policy Institute, September 17, 2002, www.earth-policy.org/Updates/Update17.htm

  4. Haluk, Ozkaynak et al, Ambient Ozone Exposure and Emergency Hospital Admissions and Emergency Room Visits for Respiratory Problems in 13 U.S. Cities, American Lung Association, Washington, DC, 1996, www.wri.org/wri/wr-98-99/urbanair.htm

  5. Warner, Jennifer, "Seniors in Polluted Areas More Likely to Seek Treatment," WebMD Medical News, November 12, 2002, www.webmd.lycos.com/content/article/1738.55811

  6. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Our Built and Natural Environments: A Technical Review of the Interactions between Land Use, Transportation and Environmental Quality, Development Community and Environmental Division, EPA 231-R-01-002, Washington, DC, January 2001, www.epa.gov/piedpage/pdf/built.pdf

  7. Massey, J.T. et al, Design and Estimation for the National Health Interview Survey, 1985-1994, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Center for Health Statistics, PHS 89-1384, and Vital and Health Statistics, Series 2, No. 110

  8. Booth, William, "Study: Pollution May Cause Asthma," Washington Post, February 1, 2002

  9. Shapiro, Robert J. et al, Conserving Energy and Preserving the Environment: The Role of Public Transportation, July 2002

  10. Jackson, R. and Kochtitzky, C., Creating a Healthy Environment: The Impact of the Built Environment on Public Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Sprawl Watch Clearinghouse, p. 6, 1996, www.sprawlwatch.org/health.pdf

  11. Friedman, M.S., et al, "Impact of Changes in Transportation and Commuting Behaviors During the 1996 Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta on Air Quality and Childhood Asthma," Journal of the American Medical Association, Vol. 285, No. 7, February 21, 2001

  12. American Obesity Association, AOA Fact Sheets: Obesity in the U.S., www.obesity.org/subs/fastfacts/obesity_US.shtml

  13. "Overweight and Obesity Threaten U.S. Health Gains," HHS News, Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, DC, December 12, 2001

  14. "Centers for Disease Control Says Suburban Sprawl Endangers Public Health: New Report Connects Obesity, Asthma and other Illnesses to Sprawl," News Release, Sierra Club, November 2, 2001, www.vapreservation.org/cdc-news.html

  15. Kraft, M. Katherine, PhD, "Health Effects of Sprawl," Address to the Women’s Transportation Seminar, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Washington DC, October 30, 2002

  16. Neff, John W., "Travel Distance Substitution Rates Between Automobile Users and Transit Passengers," Papers and Proceedings of the Applied Geography Conferences, Vol. 19, 1996, pp. 117-124

  17. www.car-accidents.com/pages/stats/2000_killed.html

  18. Frumkin, Howard, MD, "Urban Sprawl and Public Health," Public Health Reports,117, May 2002, pp. 201-217

  19. Highway Statistics Series, U.S. Federal Highway Administration, Washington, DC, www.fhwa.dot.gov/ohim/ohimstat.htm

  20. Campaign for Efficient Passenger Transportation, Dollars and Sense: The Economic Case for Public Transportation in America, June 1997

  21. National Safety Council, Injury Facts, 2001, Washington DC, 2002

  22. Pope, C., Solving Sprawl, The Sierra Club, 1999, www.sierraclub.org/sprawl/report99/transportation.asp

  23. Wener, Prof. Richard, and Evans, Prof. Gary, The Impact of Mode and Mode Transfers on Commuter Stress, Final Report, New Jersey Department of Transportation, Division of Research and Technology, August 2000

  24. Sivasubramanian, Mani Dr., Stress, Driving and Heart Surgery, www.cybersteering.com/cruise/feature/heart/heart.html

  25. Scimone, Carol, Driving You Crazy, www.new-mindmachines.com/KOLDTV/driving_stress.htm

  26. Cutting Driving Stress, Wright State University, www.wright.edu/studentorgs/csa/drivingstress.html

  27. "Survey Reveals Millions of U.S. Children Unable to Access Health Care Due to Lack of Transportation," News Release, The Children’s Health Fund, New York, July 12, 2001, www.childrenshealthfund.org/release071201.html

  28. www.transcoalition.org/library/reports/roadblocks/roadblock_exec.html

  29. "Issue 7 Supporters Link to Health Care," Cincinnati Business Courier, October 3, 2002, http://cincinnati.bizjournals.com/cincinnati/stories/2002/09/30/ daily40.html

  30. Thomas, Nancy, Report on Medical Transportation Program (MTP), ATP Program Manager, Tri-County Metropolitan Transportation District of Oregon (Tri-Met), January 20, 2000, and MTP Financial and Operating Report for December 1999, Medical Transportation Program, Tri-Met, January 2000

  31. Community Transportation Association of America, Medicaid Transportation: Assuring Access to Health Care—A Primer for States, Health Plans, Providers and Advocates, Washington, DC, January 2001, p. 19, www.ctaa.org/data/report.pdf

  32. Ibid, p. 27

  33. Community Transportation Association of America, op. cit., pp. 1, 6 34. Editorial, Detroit Free Press, April 24, 2002, http://63.251.88.172/ct/medical2002/healthtransit.asp?printview=yes

  34. U.S. General Accounting Office, Rural Ambulances, Medicare Fee Schedule Payments Could be Better Targeted, www.ctaa.org/ntrc/medical/medicare.asp?printview=yes

  35. Ibid, p. 16

 

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