Last updated:
ID:
65425
Start date:
1 February 2021
Project status:
Current
Principal investigator:
Dr Ruth Hunter
Lead institution:
Queen's University Belfast, Great Britain

Non-communicable diseases (NCD), such as cancer, heart disease, type II diabetes mellitus, chronic respiratory conditions like asthma, and poor mental health, are some of the most common causes of death in the UK. The design of our cities play an important role in preventing these chronic diseases and have a significant consequent impact on the quality of life and life expectancy of their citizens. However, in a rapidly evolving urban age, urban designers, urban planners and public health practitioners still know surprisingly little about how best to design our cities in order to prevent NCD and their known risk factors.
Our aim is to generate evidence and tools to support the urban planning and health sectors to better understand how to design our cities to prevent NCD. Objectives include:
1. Use new methods in computer vision and artificial intelligence to explore the relation between urban design and NCD in cities across the UK.
2. Investigate how different designs within cities impact on health inequalities including NCD.
3. Combine data from different sources to investigate the mechanisms by which the design of our cities causes NCD.
4. Learn lessons about how different ways of designing our cities prevent NCD and their known risk factors.
5. Develop a toolkit for action for local citizens, urban designers and planners, public health practitioners and policy makers, to help inform future policies and lead to powerful, actionable changes in the city.
6. To build a legacy of transdisciplinary research capacity in public health science, urban design and computer science, with clear pathways to impact.
We will build the evidence base on the relationship between urban design and NCD. This will be comprised of two levels of analysis: the city level and individual level. This acknowledges that people’s health is affected by their immediate environment and by the way the entire city is organised. This will help us understand which features of the built environment are associated with city designs, NCD and their known risk factors, such as not being physically active, having poor diet, smoking, consuming alcohol and being exposed to air pollution. We will then test changes to the design of our cities to analyse how they will help prevent NCD and reduce known risk factors. The findings will help inform future policies and practices leading to actionable changes in the design of our cities to make them healthier places for people to live.