Upcoming roundtable sponsored by the Food and Nutrition Board at the
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine.
If you cannot join in person, you can register for the webcast.
----
How can investments in the built environment advance obesity
solutions?*September
12*, join the Roundtable on Obesity Solutions for a workshop that will
explore the roles built environment policies and practices play in the
prevention and treatment of obesity and will highlight promising, scalable,
multi-sector strategies to create more healthful and equitable
environments. Built environment topics that will be covered include urban
planning and design, transportation systems, parks and recreation, and food
systems. Register to attend either in person or via webcast. Due to seating
capacity, in-person registration for this workshop is limited.
http://www.nationalacademies.org/hmd/Activities/Nutrition/ObesitySolutions/…
Apologies for multiple posting. The TRB NHTS task force (ABJ45T) is
organizing a data challenge more information is below.
Introduction
Can you tell us something original and surprising about transportation,
health, commerce, or patterns in America? The 2017 NHTS data is rich and
able to provide insight into important questions, if used by thorough and
curious researchers. Can you shed light on a topic like commuting, errands,
eating habits, walking, household composition, effects of ride sharing,
transit use or something else? Develop an idea, analyze the data, and
explain the importance of the result.
Data Challenge
This data challenge is a competition for enthusiastic students,
professionals, and the public who want to showcase their analytical and
technical skills. The participants may work individually or in teams and
will have to showcase practical outcome using the 2017 NHTS public use
data.
Deadline - Oct 1, 2018
Contact - Cynthia Bland at nhts.data2017(a)gmail.com
Prize - Opportunity to present at the 2019 TRB Annual Meeting.
Complete details about the data challenge are attached below.
Thanks,
Krishnan
--
Krishnan Viswanathan
5628 Burnside Circle
Tallahassee FL 32312
Hello - I second Jenny's Congratulations to Adrian for this wonderful new
position! To add a bit of history - there are other positions and even
joint degree programs (e.g. UCLA, Portland State, U Michigan and others)
that
have at various levels integrated transportation and health for quite some
Time. This new one in Scotland contributes significantly to the ongoing
formalization of the links between transportation and health as a field
within academia.
My position directly linking planning and health at the University of
British Columbia has been cross appointed for well over
a decade between the School of Population and Public Health in the Faculty
of Medicine and the School of Community and Regional Planning in the
Faculty of Applied Science which is where Engineering and Architecture and
Landscape Architecture are located. It is partially funded through a
transportation endowment from the Bombardier Foundation currently managed
by a Faculty of Medicine. The sole purpose of my position over the last
decade is to research
(http://health-design.spph.ubc.ca) and teach on the links between planning
and health.
I and others have worked at the nexus between transportation and
health for a long time now. For me it has been the entirety of my 30 year
Career starting with my dissertation research in Seattle
linking active transportation with land use mix and density which
eventually led to Walkscore after we published the results in the form of
the first "walkability map" in the Seattle Times newspaper. Susan Handy
And Ruth Steiner also had some work on this topic
around that time). I was told at the time by senior
planning colleagues that studying non-motorized travel was a bad idea and
too "pedestrian" and there would be no money or
resources in it. Five years later the U.S. Surgeon General came out with
the report on the population level health benefits of moderate physical
activity (aka walking) and the rest is history. I am happy I looked past
this well intended advice and have seen this field grow from literally
nothing to where it is today.
It is a true delight to see more and more of this type of formal
integration taking place between planning and health and I think there are
others out there with positions that make this connection directly through
their academic appointments. It is now timely that we share our
experiences and help one another navigate what is atrue interdisciplinary
experience - which has many important trade-offs to consider. These often
include having two homes in disparate parts of universities that otherwise
are often not well connected dealing with resources and funding,
accountability and service, promotions and raises, where you publish and
are visibility or not, and many other considerations. Universities tout
interdisciplinarity - yet are poorly equipped to help those that try.
Perhaps we can work together on ways to help maximize the success of these
early
efforts to make this linkage a success! It is not as easy as it
sounds ... but it is worthwhile.
Cheers,
Larry Frank, UBC
________________________________________
From: H+T--Friends [h+t--friends-bounces(a)chrispy.net] on behalf of
Mindell, Jenny [j.mindell(a)ucl.ac.uk]
Sent: Wednesday, September 12, 2018 8:58 AM
To: 'h+t--friends(a)chrispy.net'
Subject: [H+T--Friends] New (world first?) Professor of Transport and
Health
Congratulations to Adrian Davis, new Professor of Transport and Health at
Napier University, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
Adrian will be well known to most people in the transport and health
field, as he has combined transport planning and public health as both a
practitioner and an academic (truly multi- and inter-disciplinary work).
He will continue working with colleagues at the University of Western
England and his roles as Co-Chair (Science) of the Transport and Health
Study Group (THSG) and as Associate Editor of the Journal of Transport and
Health.
We think this is a world first and shows our 'niche' specialty is becoming
mainstream.
Jenny Mindell
Dr Jennifer Mindell
Professor of Public Health
Health and Social Surveys Research Group
Research Dept of Epidemiology & Public Health
UCL
1-10 Torrington Place
London WC1E 6BT
Tel: 020-7679-1269
Twitter: j_mindell
Web: http://iris.ucl.ac.uk/iris/browse/profile?upi=JMIND63
<https://www.mail.ubc.ca/owa/14.3.399.0/scripts/premium/redir.aspx?C=OwCXhB
N5kI2IpArM697rCZAwBNSjRrFWb9C_MiB82m0jp_nFlxnWCA..&URL=http%3a%2f%2firis.uc
l.ac.uk%2firis%2fbrowse%2fprofile%3fupi%3dJMIND63>
Editor-in-chief Journal of Transport and Health:
https://www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-transport-and-health/
<https://www.mail.ubc.ca/owa/14.3.399.0/scripts/premium/redir.aspx?C=7DM-5X
doLH0RdggYb-QItmy44GcPLTP8Rm-gTtQ-oMUjp_nFlxnWCA..&URL=https%3a%2f%2fwww.jo
urnals.elsevier.com%2fjournal-of-transport-and-health%2f>
_______________________________________________
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rispy.net%2fmailman%2flistinfo%2fh%2bt--friends>
Dr. Lawrence D. Frank, PhD, AICP, CIP, ASLA | Bombardier Chair and
Professor
Schools of Population & Public Health (SPPH) & Community & Regional
Planning (SCARP)
Director | Health & Community Design Lab |
http://health-design.spph.ubc.ca <http://health-design.spph.ubc.ca/> |
University of British Columbia 2206 East Mall, Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z3
SPPH Office: (604) 822-5387 | SCARP Office: (604) 822-3687 | E-mail:
lawrence.frank(a)ubc.ca <mailto:efox@ud4h.com>
Highly Cited Researcher Thompson and Reuters (2014-Present)
<https://twitter.com/UBC_HCDLab>
<http://health-design.spph.ubc.ca>
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On 2018-09-12, 8:58 AM, "Mindell, Jenny" <j.mindell(a)ucl.ac.uk> wrote:
>Congratulations to Adrian Davis, new Professor of Transport and Health at
>Napier University, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
>Adrian will be well known to most people in the transport and health
>field, as he has combined transport planning and public health as both a
>practitioner and an academic (truly multi- and inter-disciplinary work).
>He will continue working with colleagues at the University of Western
>England and his roles as Co-Chair (Science) of the Transport and Health
>Study Group (THSG) and as Associate Editor of the Journal of Transport
>and Health.
>We think this is a world first and shows our 'niche' specialty is
>becoming mainstream.
>
>Jenny Mindell
>
>Dr Jennifer Mindell
>Professor of Public Health
>Health and Social Surveys Research Group
>Research Dept of Epidemiology & Public Health
>UCL
>1-10 Torrington Place
>London WC1E 6BT
>Tel: 020-7679-1269
>Twitter: j_mindell
>Web: http://iris.ucl.ac.uk/iris/browse/profile?upi=JMIND63
>
>Editor-in-chief Journal of Transport and Health:
>https://www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-transport-and-health/
>
>
>_______________________________________________
>H+T--Friends mailing list
>H+T--Friends(a)chrispy.net
>https://www.chrispy.net/mailman/listinfo/h+t--friends
Congratulations to Adrian Davis, new Professor of Transport and Health at Napier University, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
Adrian will be well known to most people in the transport and health field, as he has combined transport planning and public health as both a practitioner and an academic (truly multi- and inter-disciplinary work). He will continue working with colleagues at the University of Western England and his roles as Co-Chair (Science) of the Transport and Health Study Group (THSG) and as Associate Editor of the Journal of Transport and Health.
We think this is a world first and shows our 'niche' specialty is becoming mainstream.
Jenny Mindell
Dr Jennifer Mindell
Professor of Public Health
Health and Social Surveys Research Group
Research Dept of Epidemiology & Public Health
UCL
1-10 Torrington Place
London WC1E 6BT
Tel: 020-7679-1269
Twitter: j_mindell
Web: http://iris.ucl.ac.uk/iris/browse/profile?upi=JMIND63
Editor-in-chief Journal of Transport and Health: https://www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-transport-and-health/
For digest users--I apologize for the glitch. About a month ago we
switched servers and I think that had something to do with the digest. I
will try to keep an eye on it moving forward. Hopefully whatever
glitched is behind us. If you are really concerned about timeliness of
course getting off the digest would be better.
Karin, thanks for letting me know. I was totally unaware that there was
a digest issue.
On 9/12/2018 10:55 AM, Karin Valentine Goins wrote:
> I have been on the listserv a couple years. I had not received a
> Digest email in months, but received one today with dates as long ago
> as July with deadlines that have now passed.
>
> Did these messages go out to the list on the dates shown? Do I need to
> switch from digest to single format to receive more timely?
>
> Thanks,
> Karin Valentine Goins
--
Ed Christopher
Transportation Planning Consultant
708-269-5237