| Literature DB >> 25913182 |
Mireia Gascon1,2,3,4, Margarita Triguero-Mas5,6, David Martínez7,8, Payam Dadvand9,10, Joan Forns11,12,13, Antoni Plasència14, Mark J Nieuwenhuijsen15,16.
Abstract
Many studies conducted during the last decade suggest the mental health benefits of green and blue spaces. We aimed to systematically review the available literature on the long-term mental health benefits of residential green and blue spaces by including studies that used standardized tools or objective measures of both the exposures and the outcomes of interest. We followed the PRISMA statement guidelines for reporting systematic reviews and meta-analysis. In total 28 studies were included in the systematic review. We found limited evidence for a causal relationship between surrounding greenness and mental health in adults, whereas the evidence was inadequate in children. The evidence was also inadequate for the other exposures evaluated (access to green spaces, quality of green spaces, and blue spaces) in both adults and children. The main limitation was the limited number of studies, together with the heterogeneity regarding exposure assessment. Given the increase in mental health problems and the current rapid urbanization worldwide, results of the present systematic review should be taken into account in future urban planning. However, further research is needed to provide more consistent evidence and more detailed information on the mechanisms and the characteristics of the green and blue spaces that promote better mental health. We provide recommendations for future studies in order to provide consistent and evidence-based recommendations for policy makers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25913182 PMCID: PMC4410252 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph120404354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Main characteristics and results of the studies on surrounding greenness and mental health.
| Author (Year, Country) | Study Design | Age of the Study Population (Stratifications/Interactions) | N | Tools to Measure Mental Health | Mental Health Item | Greenness Data Source | Surrounding Greenness Indicator | Risk of Mental Health Problems |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exclusively children | ||||||||
| Amoly 2014 | Cross-sectional | Children 7–10 y | 2111 | SDQ ADHD/DSM-IV | Emotional & behavioural problems a | NDVI | 100 m, 250 m, 500 m buffers | Increasing greenness 100 m buffer: ↓ total SDQ difficulties, SDQ hyperactivity/inattention & ADHD (inattention) |
| Balseviciene | Cross-sectional | 4–6 y (maternal education) | 1468 | SDQ | Emotional & behavioural problems a | NDVI | 300 m buffer | Higher maternal education group: increasing greenness ↑ conditional problems & ↓ prosocial behaviour |
| Flouri | Longitudinal | 3, 5 & 7 y (socioeconomic status) | 6384 | SDQ | Emotional & behavioural problems a | Land-cover map | % GS at CAU | Poor children of age 3y to 5y: increasing greenness ↓ emotional problems |
| Markevych | Cross-sectional | 10 y (gender, urbanity degree) | 1932 | SDQ | Emotional & behavioural problems a | NDVI | 500 m buffer | - |
| Adults (or population irrespective of age) | ||||||||
| Alcock | Longitudinal | Adults | 1064 | GHQ-12 | Mental health | Land-cover map | % GS at CAU (residence change in time) | ↑ mental health in people moving to greener areas |
| Araya | Cross-sectional | Adults 16–64 y | 3870 | CIS-R ICD-10 | Psychiatric, anxiety and depressive disorders | BEAT (audit) | Presence of public green areas and its quality b at CAU | Increasing presence of public green areas ↓ risk of depression (ICD-10) |
| Astell-Burt | Cross-sectional | >45 y (physical activity) | 260061 | K10 | Psychological distress | Land-cover map | % GS in 1 km buffer | Increasing greenness ↓ risk in all population (after stratification only in physically active adults) |
| Astell-Burt | Longitudinal | >15 y (age, gender) | 65407 | GHQ-12 | Minor psychiatric morbidity | Land-cover map | % GS at CAU | Increasing greenness ↓ risk in males >30 years and in females >41 years & living in moderate greenness |
| Beyer | Cross-sectional | 21–74 y | 2479 | DASS | Depression Anxiety Stress | NDVI | At CAU | Increasing greenness ↓ risk of depression & anxiety |
| De Vries | Cross-sectional | All ages (education, urbanity degree) | 10197 | GHQ | Minor psychiatric morbidity | Land-cover map | % GS in 1 km & 3 km buffers | Increasing greenness between 1 and 3 km ↓ risk in all population (after stratification only in low educated) |
| Fan | Cross-sectional | Adults 18–75 y | 1544 | PSS | Stress | NDVI | 800 m buffer | - |
| Adults (or population irrespective of age) | ||||||||
| Francis | Cross-sectional | Adults (20–79 y) | 911 | K6 | Psychological distress | Land-cover map | Size and n° of public open space in a 1600 m buffer | - |
| Maas | Cross-sectional | 12 to >65 y | 4842-10089 | GHQ-12 | Propensity to psychiatric morbidity | Land-cover map | % GS in 1 km & 3 km buffers | Increasing greenness in 1 km ↓ propensity to psychiatric morbidity |
| Maas | Cross-sectional | All ages (age, socioeconomic status, urbanity degree) | 345143 | Primary care medical records | Mental health morbidity (depression and anxiety) | Land-cover map | % GS in 1 km & 3 km buffers | Increasing greenness in 1 km ↓ depression & anxiety |
| Nutsford | Ecological | >15 y | 319521 | Health ministry database | Anxiety/mood disorder treatment counts | Land-cover map | % of total and useable GS of >500 m2 (300 m & 3 km buffers) | Increasing total and usable GS in 3 km ↓ risk of treatment |
| Richardson | Cross-sectional | >15 y (physical activity) | 8157 | SF-36 | Mental health | Land-cover map | % GS of ≥0.02 ha at CAU | Increasing greenness ↓ poor mental health |
| Roe | Cross-sectional | 33–55 y of socio-economically deprived areas | ~100 | PSS WEMWBS (short version) | Stress Well-being | Land-cover map | % GS at CAU | Increasing greenness ↓ stressc |
| Sarkar | Cross-sectional | 65–84 y | 687 | GHQ-30 | Psychological distress | NDVI | 500 m buffer | - |
| Adults (or population irrespective of age) | ||||||||
| Triguero-Mas | Cross-sectional | 34–64 y (physical activity, gender, degree of urbanization, socioeconomic status and social support) | 8793 | GHQ-12 SF-36 | Perceived mental health | NDVI | 100 m, 300 m, 500 m and 1 km buffers | Increasing greenness ↓ risk of poor mental health (for both tests and all buffers assessed) |
| Van den Berg | Cross-sectional | >18 y (stressful life events) | 4529 | GHQ-12 | Perceived mental health | Land-cover map | % GS in 1 km & 3 km buffers | - |
| Weich | Cross-sectional | Adults >16 y | 1896 | CES-D20 | Depression | BESSC (audit) | Number of trees and amount of houses with private garden in the housing area | - |
| White | Longitudinal | Adults | 12818 | GHQ-12 | Mental health and well-being | Land-cover map | % GS at CAU | Increasing greenness ↓ risk of poor mental health |
ADHD/DMS-IV: ADHD symptom Criteria of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder, 4th Edition; CAU level: Census area unit level; CES-D20: Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale (20 items); CIS-R: Revised Clinical Interview Schedule; DASS: Depression Anxiety and Stress Scales; GHQ-(12/30): General Health Questionnaire-(number of items included); GS: green space; ICD-10: International Classification of Disease; K(6/10): Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (number of items included); NDVI: Normalized Difference Vegetation Index; PSS: Perceived Stress Scale; SDQ: Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire; SF-36: Short form health survey (36 items), WEMWBS: Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale; a SDQ measures hyperactivity, emotional symptoms, conduct problems, peer problems, prosocial behaviour and ADHD/DMS-IV measures inattention and hyperactivity-impulsivity symptoms; b A factor was created to define surrounding greenness. The factor included the presence of public green areas and the state of these areas, as well as other factors that did not have as much as weight as the first two within the factor; c These results were supported by objective measures of cortisol (biomarker of stress).
Main characteristics and results of the studies on access to green spaces and mental health.
| Author (Year, Country) | Study Design | Age of the Study Population (Stratifications/Interactions) | N | Tools to Measure Mental Health | Mental Health Item | Access to GS Indicator a | Risk of Mental Health Problems |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exclusively children | |||||||
| Amoly | Cross-sectional | 7–10 y | 2111 | SDQ ADHD/DSM-IV | Emotional & behavioural problems b | Presence of a GS ≥0.05 km2 in a 300 m buffer | - |
| Balseviciene | Cross-sectional | 4–6 y (maternal education) | 1468 | SDQ | Emotional & behavioural problems b | Distance to the nearest park of >1 ha and 65% of the land tree covered | Lower maternal education group: increasing distance ↑ behavioral problems, but not emotional problems |
| Markevych | Cross-sectional | 10 y (gender, urbanity degree) | 1932 | SDQ | Emotional & behavioural problems b | Distance to the nearest GS | Increasing distance ↑ risk hyperactivity/inattention & peer relationship problems (after stratification only in males) |
| Adults (or population irrespective of age) | |||||||
| Duncan | Cross-sectional | ~16 y (gender, ethnicity) | 1170 | MDS | Depression symptoms | Recreational open space & parks (400 m & 800 m buffers) | Increasing access to recreational open space in a 400 m buffer: ↓ risk in Asian |
| Fan | Cross-sectional | Adults 18–75 y | 1544 | PSS | Stress | Distance to the nearest park | - |
| Nutsford | Ecological | >15 y | 319521 | Health ministry database | Anxiety/mood disorder treatment counts | Distance to total and useable GS | Increasing distance to usable GS ↑ risk of treatment |
| Adults (or population irrespective of age) | |||||||
| Reklaitiene | Cross-sectional | 45–72 y (age, gender, park use) | 7161 | CES-D10 | Depressive symptoms | Distance to the nearest park (of >1 ha and 65% of the land covered with green space; | Park users (≥4 h/week): increasing distance ↑ risk of depressive symptoms (after stratification only in females) |
| Sturm | Cross-sectional | Adults | 1070 | MHI-5 | Mental health | Distance to the studied parks (1.6 km) | Increasing distance ↓ mental health (no association beyond 1.6km) |
| Triguero-Mas | Cross-sectional | 34–64 y (physical activity, gender, degree of urbanization, socioeconomic status and social support) | 8793 | GHQ-12 SF-36 | Perceived mental health | Presence of a GS within 100 m, 300 m, 500 m and 1 km buffers | - |
ADHD/DMS-IV: ADHD symptom Criteria of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder, 4th Edition; CES-D10: Centre for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale (10 items); GS: green space; K6: Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (6 items); MDS: Modified Depression Scale; MHI-5: Mental Health Inventory (5 items); SDQ: Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire; All used land-cover map to calculate access to GS except Sturm et al. 2014, who used an audit tool; b SDQ measures hyperactivity, emotional symptoms, conduct problems, peer problems, prosocial behaviour and ADHD/DMS-IV measures inattention and hyperactivity-impulsivity symptoms.
Figure 1Selection process of the articles.
Main estimations of the association between surrounding greenness or access to green space and mental health a (results presented by exposure type, children/adults and then outcome type) a.
| Author (Year) | N | Exposure Type | Exposure Description | Questionnaire/Outcome | Estimate Type | Estimate b |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amoly | 2111 | NDVI in 500 m buffer | Mean (IQR) = 0.06 (0.05) | SDQ (cont.) | % change (95%CI) | −4.0 (−6.7, −1.2) |
| Balseviciene | 1172 (high maternal education) | NDVI in 300 m buffer | Not provided | SDQ (cont.) | β | 2.29 ( |
| Flouri | 6384 | % GS at CAU | Range = 0 to 97% | SDQ (cont.) c | β (SE) | 0.00 (0.01) |
| Markevych | 1932 | NDVI in 500 m buffer | Not provided | SDQ (cont.) | Data not shown (no association) | |
| Alcock | 1064 | See footnote d | - | GHQ-12 (cont.) | β (SE) | 0.431 (0.162) b |
| Araya | 3870 | Factor of “green spaces” e | Mean (SD) = 0.97 (0.77) | CIS-R (cont.) | β (95%CI) | −0.01 (−0.09, 0.06) |
| Astell-Burt | 29,626 (men) | % GS at CAU | The highest tertile | GHQ-12 (cont.) | β (SE) | −0.33 (0.12) |
| De Vries | 10,197 | % GS between 1 and 3 km | Not provided | GHQ (dich.) | β (SD) | −0.01 (0.003) |
| Maas | 10,089 | % GS in 3 km | Mean (SD) = 60.7 (21.6) | GHQ-12 (dich.) | β (SE) | −0.004 (0.002) |
| Richardson | 8157 | % GS at CAU | The highest quartiles | SF-36 (dich.) | OR (95%CI) | 0.81 (0.66, 1.00) |
| Sarkar | 687 | NDVI | Mean (range) = 0.09 (−0.06, 0.33) | GHQ-30 (dich.) | OR (95%CI) | 0.79 (0.52, 1.23) |
| Triguero-Mas | 8793 | NDVI in 300 m | Median (1st, 3rd quartile) = 0.16 (0.13, 0.21) | GHQ-12 (dich.) | OR (95%CI) | 0.79 (0.71, 0.88) |
| Van den Berg | 4529 | % GS in 3 km | dich. (<62.82% GS) | GHQ (cont.) | β (z) | 0.00 (0.03) |
| White | 12,818 | % GS at CAU | Mean (SD) = 64.6 (16.7) | GHQ-12 (cont.) | β (SE) | −0.004 (0.01) |
| Astell-Burt | 260,061 | % GS in 1 km buffer | The highest quintile | K10 (dich.) | OR (95%CI) | 0.91 (0.84, 1.00) |
| Fan | 1544 | NDVI (0-10 scale) | Mean (SD) = 3.6 (0.75) | PSS (cont.) | β (95%CI) | −0.04 (−0.10, 0.01) |
| Francis | 911 | Number of POS (≥5 to 14 ) | 44% | K6 (cont.) | OR (95%CI) | 1.43 (0.96, 2.13) b |
| Roe | 103 | % GS at CAU | Not provided | PSS (cont.) | β (95%CI) | −0.08 (−0.14, −0.01) |
| Araya | 3870 | Factor of “green spaces” e | Mean (SD) = 0.97 (0.77) | ICD-10 (dich.) | OR (95%CI) | 0.94 (0.90, 0.99) |
| Beyer | 2479 | % Tree canopy | Mean (SD) = 0.17 (0.18) | DASS (cont.) | β (SE) | −4.02 (1.17) |
| Maas | 345,143 | % GS in 3 km | Mea | Primary care records (depression-dich.) | OR (95%CI) | 0.98 (0.96, 1.00) |
| Nutsford | 319,521 | % GS in 3 km | Mea | Anxiety/depression treatment (dich.) | IRR (95%CI) | 0.96 (0.94, 0.97) |
| Weich | 1896 | >5 trees around the house | 18.2% | CES-D20 (dich.) | OR (95%CI) | 1.20 (0.78, 1.84) |
| Amoly | 2111 | GS > 0.05 km2 within 300 m | 18.1% | SDQ (cont.) | % change (95%CI) | −1.3 (−8.2, 6.2) |
| Balseviciene | 1172 (high maternal education) | Distance to the nearest park | Mean (SD) = 667 (544) | SDQ (cont.) | β | −0.01 ( |
| Markevych | 1932 | Distance to the nearest GS | Median (IQR) = 289.1 (368.1) | SDQ (dich.) | OR (95%CI) | 1.07 (0.92, 1.23) |
| Duncan | 1170 | Park density in 400 m | Not provided | MDS (cont.) | β (SE) | −0.002 (0.05) |
| Fan | 1544 | Distance to the nearest park (m) | Mean (SD) = 0.24 (0.18) | PSS (cont.) | β (95%CI) | 0.024 (−0.24, 0.28) |
| Nutsford | 319,521 | Distance to the GS (km) | Mea | Anxiety/depression treatment (dich.) | IRR (95%CI) | 1.26 (0.95, 1.68) |
| Reklaitiene | 7161 | Living > 1 km from the nearest park | ≈25% | CES-D10 (dich.) | OR (95%CI) | 0.96 (0.71, 1.29) |
| Sturm | 1070 | Distance to parks of interest | Cut-offs, no further info | MHI-5 (cont.) | β (SE) | −0.33 (1.17) b |
| Triguero-Mas | 8793 | Presence of a GS within 300 m | 60.3% | GHQ-12 (dich.) | OR (95%CI) | 0.93 (0.79, 1.09) |
CES-D(10/20): Centre for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale (number of items included); cont.: outcomes treated as a continuous variable; K6: Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (6 items); MDS: Modified Depression Scale; MHI-5: Mental Health Inventory (5 items); CAU level: Census area unit level; DASS: Depression Anxiety and Stress Scales; dich.: outcome treated as a dichotomized variable; GHQ-(12/30): General Health Questionnaire-(number of items included); GS: green space; ICD-10: International Classification of Disease; K(6/10): Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (number of items included); NDVI: Normalized Difference Vegetation Index; PSS: Perceived Stress Scale; SDQ: Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire; SF-36: Short form health survey (36 items), WEMWBS: Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale; a Some of the data was not available in the manuscripts and was obtained from the corresponding authors; b For all continuous outcomes a higher score indicates worse mental health or more behavioural problems, except the study of Alcock et al. 2014 in which the GHQ score was inversed and the study of Sturm et al. 2014 in which a higher score indicates better mental health. For all dichotomous outcomes (0/1) 1= worse mental health, more behavioral problems or being more prone to having a psychiatric problem. The study of Francis et al. 2012 calculated the odds of low psychological distress instead of the odds for high psychological distress; c The association with the total SDQ score was not evaluated and thus the association with conduct problems is reported (results were similar for the other SDQ items); d This study estimated mental health changes in two populations; those moving to greener areas and those moving to less green areas; e A factor was created to define surrounding greenness. The factor included the presence of public green areas and the state of these areas, as well as other factors that did not have as much as weight as the first two within the factor; f Non-linear associations according to age and gender; g Outcome log-transformed; h Results of the non-adjusted model as the adjusted model results were unavailable.