Active travel and paratransit use in African cities: Mixed-method systematic review and meta-ethnography

Randall, L (通讯作者),Postnet Suite 37,Box 92418, ZA-2117 Norwood, South Africa.
2023-1
Active travel, as a key form of physical activity, can help offset noncommunicable diseases as rapidly urbanising countries undergo epidemiological transition. In Africa a human mobility transition is underway as cities sprawl and motorization rises and preserving active travel modes (walking, cycling and public transport) is important for public health. Across the continent, public transport is dominated by paratransit, privately owned informal modes serving the general public. We reviewed the literature on active travel and paratransit in African cities, published from January 2008 to January 2019. We included 19 quantitative, 14 mixed-method and 8 qualitative studies (n = 41), narratively synthesizing the quantitative data and meta-ethnographically analysing the qualitative data. Integrated findings showed that walking was high, cycling was low and paratransit was a critical mobility option for poor peripheral residents facing long livelihood-generation journeys. As an indigenous solution to dysfunctional mobility systems shaped by colonial and apartheid legacies it was an effective connector, penetrating areas unserved by formal public transport and helping break cycles of poverty. From a public health perspective, it preserved active travel by reducing mode-shifting to private vehicles. Yet many city authorities viewed it as rogue, out of keeping with the 'ideal modern city', adopting official anti-paratransit stances without necessarily considering the contribution of active travel to public health. The studies varied in quality and showed uneven geographic representation, with data from Central and Northern Africa especially sparse; notably, there was a high prevalence of non -local authors and out-of-country funding. Nevertheless, drawing together a rich cross-disciplinary set of studies spanning over a decade, the review expands the literature at the intersection of transport and health with its novel focus on paratransit as a key active travel mode in African cities. Further innovative research could improve paratransit's legibility for policymakers and practitioners, fostering its inclusion in integrated transport plans.
JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT & HEALTH
卷号:28
ISSN:2214-1405|收录类别:SSCI
语种
英语
来源机构
University of Witwatersrand; University of Cambridge; University of Witwatersrand; University of Witwatersrand; University of Cambridge; University of Cape Town; University West Indies Mona Jamaica; University of the West Indies Open Campus; University of Cambridge; University of Yaounde I; University of Cape Town; UOC Universitat Oberta de Catalunya
资助信息
This work was supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) (GHR: 16/137/34) using UK aid from the UK Government to support global health research. The views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the UK Department of Health and Social Care. Lee Randall and Safura Abdool Karim were supported by the SAMRC/Wits Centre for Health Economics and Decision Science-PRICELESS-SA, School of Public Health, University of the Witwatersrand (SAMRC grant/project code 23108) . Anna Brugulat-Panes was funded by the UKRI Economic Social Research Council Doctoral Training Program (ESRC DTP) and by the MRC Epidemiology Unit, School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge. Lambed Tatah was funded by a Cambridge International Islamic Development Bank PhD scholarship. Gabriel Okello held an Air Quality and NCDs fellowship supported by a philanthropic gift from AstraZeneca, grant number G111521. No funders played a role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
被引频次(WOS)
0
被引频次(其他)
0
180天使用计数
0
2013以来使用计数
0
出版年
2023-1
DOI
10.1016/j.jth.2022.101558
学科领域
循证公共卫生
关键词
Paratransit Active travel African cities Public health Systematic review Meta-ethnography
资助机构
National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)(National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)) SAMRC/Wits Centre for Health Economics and Decision Science-PRICELESS-SA, School of Public Health, University of the Witwatersrand UKRI Economic Social Research Council Doctoral Training Program (ESRC DTP) MRC Epidemiology Unit(UK Research & Innovation (UKRI)Medical Research Council UK (MRC)) School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge(University of Cambridge) Cambridge International Islamic Development Bank PhD scholarship AstraZeneca(AstraZeneca)
WOS学科分类
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health Transportation