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A scoping review of bicycling interventions’ impacts on well-being

28 points - today at 6:12 PM

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  • pjs_

    today at 7:39 PM

    Being able to cycle to and from work across a nice university campus, through fields and trees and in good weather, makes me feel as rich as any human who has ever lived

    • ervine

      today at 7:14 PM

      My love of cycling in every form is one of the greatest gifts my dad gave to me. I wish everyone was so lucky to find an activity they were obsessed with that has only upsides.

      So much North American rhetoric is focused on hatred of the cyclist - while that bums me out, what bums me out even more is that all the haters are missing out on the wonderful world of cycling. Commuter, road, gravel, mountain, track, indoor, fixed, single speed, folding, electric, uni, cargo, whatever.

      I'm gonna go ride now.

        • __mharrison__

          today at 7:42 PM

          Recumbent...

      • geophph

        today at 7:09 PM

        Certainly has a huge impact on my own mental health. My commute options are bike (2hr total pretty much without fail) or drive (on average 1:15 total) and even though the 45 min cost is not nothing, I know I’m happier, more pleasant and have less migraines when I commute more steadily by bike than drive. Doesn’t even matter about weather. I really appreciate my time on the bike to get some exercise, be outside, and just generally not be in a car.

        • mattlondon

          today at 7:45 PM

          Is this impact above and beyond just the same amount of physical exercise? E.g. jogging?

          I think at this stage it is well understood that physical exercise has all these positives, so it would be interesting to know if anyone knows if bicycling is even better, or if it's just more of the same?

          Is cycling special I guess .... Like, I dunno using a pogo stick might have the same benefit as cycling, since it's all just physical activity at the end of the day?

          • __mharrison__

            today at 7:43 PM

            Biking is great. Find an excuse to do it. Two that have worked for me: Commuting and coaching the HS mountain bike team.

            • scottious

              today at 7:09 PM

              Cycling is great for many reasons, but I feel that the biggest boost to my well-being was giving up driving.

                • thewebguyd

                  today at 7:20 PM

                  I'm a firm believer in cars ruin cities.

                  Cycling is great. I ride both for sport/fitness and for errands, has a ton of benefits, but I agree with you that the biggest boost is not driving.

                  Car culture/motonormativity in the US is a huge problem and transit here is severely lacking, cycling infrastructure or other wise (trains, busses, safe pedestrian paths and areas, trams, etc.).

                  People point to traffic and stress, but there are overlooked harms of car culture we tend to ignore. It's responsible for a significant portion of emissions, and drivers and those near cars inhale a staggering amount of microplastics.

                  Those who use public transit are less likely to be overweight, less likely to devlop type 2 diabetes, and less likely to have high blood pressure.

                  Driving needs to stop being an unavoidable default. EVs and self driving aren't the answer either, all the same problems, except exhaust, are present with EVs.

                    • scottious

                      today at 7:42 PM

                      I agree. This is one reason why I want gas prices to go to $10/gallon. It will hurt, but maybe we'll start having some serious conversations about our awful transportation system and city design

                      • jbmchuck

                        today at 7:25 PM

                        Absolutely. The US' urban density problems, housing cost crisis - they all go back to car-based society.

                • sourcecodeplz

                  today at 7:35 PM

                  From what I've read from this study it seems that constant cycling it what helps most, not just from time to time.