Urban Park Use During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Are Socially Vulnerable Communities Disproportionately Impacted?

IF 2.1 Q3 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Frontiers in Sustainable Cities Pub Date : 2021-09-29 DOI:10.3389/frsc.2021.710243
Lincoln R. Larson, Zhenzhen Zhang, Jae In Oh, Will Beam, S. Ogletree, J. Bocarro, K. Lee, Jonathan M. Casper, K. Stevenson, J. Hipp, Lauren E. Mullenbach, Matt Carusona, Michelle L. Wells
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引用次数: 49

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic altered human behavior around the world. To maintain mental and physical health during periods of lockdown and quarantine, people often engaged in outdoor, physically distanced activities such as visits to parks and greenspace. However, research tracking outdoor recreation patterns during the pandemic has yielded inconsistent results, and few studies have explored the impacts of COVID-19 on park use across diverse neighborhoods. We used a mixed methods approach to examine changes in park use patterns in cities across North Carolina, USA, during the COVID-19 pandemic, with an emphasis on impacts in socially vulnerable communities (based on racial/ethnic composition and socioeconomic status). First, we surveyed a demographically representative sample of 611 urban residents during August 2020 to assess their use of outdoor park spaces before and during the pandemic. Second, we used cell phone location (i.e., geo-tracking) data to document changes in park visits within 605 socioeconomically diverse urban census tracts before (July 2019) and during (July 2020) the pandemic. Data from both methods revealed urban park use declined during the pandemic; 56% of survey respondents said they stopped or reduced park use, and geo-tracked park visits dropped by 15%. Park users also became more homogenous, with visits increasing the most for past park visitors and declining the most in socially vulnerable communities and among individuals who were BIPOC or lower-income. Our results raise concerns about urban park use during the COVID-19 pandemic and suggest pre-existing health disparities in socially vulnerable communities might be exacerbated by inequitable access and utilization of parks and greenspace.
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COVID-19大流行期间的城市公园使用:社会弱势社区是否受到不成比例的影响?
COVID-19大流行改变了世界各地的人类行为。为了在封锁和隔离期间保持身心健康,人们经常从事户外、身体距离较远的活动,如参观公园和绿地。然而,在大流行期间追踪户外娱乐模式的研究得出了不一致的结果,很少有研究探讨了COVID-19对不同社区公园使用的影响。我们使用混合方法研究了2019冠状病毒病大流行期间美国北卡罗来纳州城市公园使用模式的变化,重点研究了对社会弱势社区的影响(基于种族/民族构成和社会经济地位)。首先,我们在2020年8月对具有人口统计学代表性的611名城市居民样本进行了调查,以评估他们在大流行之前和期间对室外公园空间的使用情况。其次,我们使用手机定位(即地理跟踪)数据来记录605个社会经济不同的城市人口普查区在疫情之前(2019年7月)和期间(2020年7月)公园参观的变化。两种方法的数据显示,大流行期间城市公园的使用有所下降;56%的受访者表示,他们停止或减少了公园的使用,地理追踪公园的访问量下降了15%。公园用户也变得更加同质化,过去的公园游客访问量增加最多,而社会脆弱社区和BIPOC或低收入人群的访问量下降最多。我们的研究结果引起了人们对2019冠状病毒病大流行期间城市公园使用的担忧,并表明社会弱势社区中存在的健康差距可能会因公园和绿地的不公平获取和利用而加剧。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
7.10%
发文量
176
审稿时长
13 weeks
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