| Literature DB >> 30486416 |
Gert-Jan Vanaken1, Marina Danckaerts1.
Abstract
In recent years, the interest in the relationship between exposure to green spaces and children's and adolescents' mental health has risen. This systematic review aims to provide an overview of observational studies assessing the association between empirical green space exposure with standardized outcome measures of mental health problems, mental well-being and developmental problems in children, adolescents and young adults. The PRISMA statement guidelines for reporting systematic reviews were followed. A PubMed and Scopus search resulted in the inclusion of 21 studies. The evidence consistently suggests a beneficial association between green space exposure and children's emotional and behavioral difficulties, particularly with hyperactivity and inattention problems. Limited evidence suggests a beneficial association with mental well-being in children and depressive symptoms in adolescents and young adults. These beneficial associations are resistant to adjustment for demographic and socio-economic confounders, which thus may represent independent links. Mediating factors and the variability of this association between different age groups are discussed. From a precautionary principle, evidence up to now demands the attention of policy makers, urban planners and mental healthcare workers in order to protect children's and adolescents' mental health in light of rapid global urbanization by providing sufficient exposure to green spaces.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents; children; green space; mental health; mental well-being; urban planning
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30486416 PMCID: PMC6313536 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15122668
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Search results. Figure based on Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines by Moher et al. [11].
Study characteristics, methodology and results.
| Author, Year, Country | Study Design | Exposure Data Source | Exposure Area | Exposure Concept (Scale) | Outcome Instrument | Confounders Adjusted for in Model | Significant Results in Adjusted Model | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aggio et al., 2015, Scotland [ | cross-sectional | 3586 | questionnaire | residence | walking time to nearest GS | SDQ | no adjusted model in publication | (Not adjusted) more than 20 min walking time to GS associated with higher scores on TDS. |
| Amoly et al., 2014, Spain [ | cross-sectional | 2111 | NDVI, questionnaire | residence, school | average greenness (100 m, 250 m, 500 m); GS playing time; proximity to major GS | SDQ, DSM IV/ADHD | gender, school level, ethnicity, SES, parental marital status, nSES preterm birth, breastfeeding, environmental tobacco smoke, gestational maternal smoking, responding person | Average greenness inversely associated with TDS, H/I & DSM IV-ADHD score; green space playing time inversely associated with TDS, emotional and peer problems; proximity to major GS not associated with outcome parameters. |
| Balseviciene, 2014, Lithuania [ | cross-sectional | 1468 | NDVI, land cover map | residence | average greenness (300 m); distance to city park | SDQ | age, gender, parenting stress, SES | Distance to city park positively associated with TDS, H/I, peer and conduct problems in low SES subgroup; no associations with average greenness. |
| Bezold et al., 2017, USA [ | cross-sectional | 9385 | NDVI | residence | average greenness (250 m, 1250 m) | McKnight Risk Factor Survey | age, gender, ethnicity, grade level, SES, maternal history of depression, nSES, PM2.5 | IQR increase in average greenness associated with 11% lower odds of high depressive symptoms. |
| Bezold et al., 2018, USA [ | longitudinal | 11,346 | NDVI | residence | cumulative average greenness (1000 m) | Mc Knight Risk Factor Survey; CES-D | age, gender, ethnicity, SES, maternal history of depression, population density, nSES, PM2.5 | IQR increase in cumulative residential greenness associated with 6% lower incidence of high depressive symptoms; stronger associations for under-18 year olds and in more densely populated areas. |
| Dadvand et al., 2015, Spain [ | longitudinal | 2593 | NDVI | residence, school, commuting | average greenness (250 m residence, 50 m commuting route, 50 m school) | Compu-terized n-back, ANT | age, gender, SES, nSES, air pollution | Average greenness positively associated with 12 m development of two-back, three-back and ANT results. |
| Dadvand et al., 2017, Spain [ | longitudinal | 1875 | NDVI, VCF | residence | cumulative average greenness (100 m, 300 m, 500 m), tree canopy cover | computerized K-CPT, ANT | age, gender, preterm birth, maternal cognitive performance, gestational smoking, environmental tobacco exposure, SES, nSES | Cumulative average greenness inversely associated with K-CPT omission errors and HRT-SE at 4–5 years, and with ANT HRT-SE at 7 years. |
| Dzhambov et al., 2018, Bulgaria [ | cross-sectional | 399 | NDVI, SAVI, TCI, GIS, questionnaire | residence | average greenness (500 m), tree canopy cover, GS access/quality/usage | GHQ | age, gender, ethnicity, SES orientation of rooms duration of residence, time spent at home, air pollution, noise, population density | No direct associations; positive association via serial mediation (restoration, physical activity, social cohesion). |
| Feng and Astell-Burt, 2017, Australia [ | longitudinal | 4968 | land cover map, question-naire | residence | amount of GS (SA2), GS quality | SDQ | age, gender, ethnicity, SES, nSES, urbanicity | Amount and quality of GS inversely associated with TDS, IS and ES, for all age groups; for older children GS quality more strongly inversely associatied with IS. |
| Feng, 2017, Australia [ | cross-sectional | 3083 | land cover map, question-naire | residence | amount of GS (SA2), GS quality | SDQ | age, gender, SES, nSES, geographic remoteness | Amount of GS inversely associated with the parent-reported TDS and IS; GS quality inversely associated with both parent- and child-reported TDS, IS and ES; stronger associations found for parent-reported scores. |
| Flouri et al., 2014, UK [ | longitudinal | 6383 | land cover map, question-naire | residence | amount GS (LSOA), use of GS | SDQ | age, gender, ethnicity, SES, family structure, use of GS, access to private garden, life adversity, nSES, maternal (mental) health, physical activity | Amount of GS inversely associated with emotional problems score for age 3–5 years. |
| Huynh et al., 2013, Canada [ | cross-sectional | 17,249 | land cover map | school | amount GS (5000 m) | Cantrill ladder | age, gender, ethnicity, SES, nSES | Amount of GS not associated with well-being. |
| Kabisch et al., 2016, Germany [ | ecological | 30,427 | land cover map | residence | amount GS (LEA) (/capita) | health visit | sub-district level: SES, ethnicity, measles immunization, participation in check-up, kindergarten attendance, tobacco exposure | Amount of GS inversely associated with deficits in visuo-motoric development. |
| Kim et al., 2016, USA [ | cross-sectional | 92 | remote sensing data (NDVI-like) | residence | amount, number, size, distance to, cohesiveness of GS (400 m, 800 m) | PedsQL | age, gender, SES, nSES, BMI, physical activity | Larger and more tree areas positively associated with children’s health related quality of life. |
| Markevych et al., 2014, Germany [ | cross-sectional | 1932 | land cover map, NDVI | residence | distance to nearest GS | SDQ | age, gender, SES, maternal age at birth, parental marital status, screen/outdoors time | Residence > 500 m away from nearest GS positively associated with TDS, peer relationship and H/I problems (after stratification; only association with H/I for boys), no associations for residential average greenness. |
| Richardson et al., 2017, Scotland [ | longitudinal | 2909 | land cover map, question-naire | residence | amount GS and public parks (500 m), access to private garden | SDQ | age, gender, SES, parental mental health, nSES, hours of screen time | Private garden access strongly associated with TDS and H/I and to lesser extent with peer and conduct problems, neighborhood amount of GS associated with prosocial behavior scores, little evidence of influence on developmental trajectory. |
| Saw et al., 2015, Singapore [ | cross-sectional | 426 | land cover map, question-naire | residence | distance from nearest GS, number of GS’s (1200 m), use of GS | LSS, Pos.and Neg. Affect Scale, PSS | age, gender, SES, physical activity, serious health problems, personality traits | Neither access to or use of GS associated with well-being. |
| Ward et al., 2016, New Zealand [ | cross-sectional | 72 | geolocation and timing | all locations | time spent in GS | LSS; TDIW; HS; comp. CNS-Vital Signs test | age, gender, school, physical activity | Time spent in GS and physical activity positively associated with greater emotional wellbeing, no associations with neurocognitive development measures. |
| Wu et al., 2017, USA [ | ecological | ~3 × 106 | land cover map | school district | amout forest and grassland (school district), amount (near-road) tree canopy. | prevalence autism | district level: ethnicity, gender, SES, road density | Amount of GS and tree cover metrics inversely associated with autism prevalence in high road density districts. |
| Younan et al., 2016, USA [ | longitudinal | 1287 | NDVI | residence | average greenness (250 m, 350 m, 500 m, 1000 m) | CBCL-Agression | age, gender, ethnicity, SES, nSES, ambient temperature, traffic density and proximity to freeways and roads, maternal depression, gestational smoking | IQR increase in average greenness inversely associated with aggresive behaviour. |
| Zach et al., 2016, Germany [ | cross-sectional | 6206 | questionnaire | residence | availablity of GS | SDQ | gender, country of birth, SES, single parenthood, crowding, traffic load | Non-accessibility of green space associated with TDS and hyperactivity/inattention problems. |
Note: ADHD, Attention Deficit and Hyperactivity Disorder; ANT, Attention Network Task; CBCL, Child Behavior Checklist; CES-D, Center for Epidemiologic Studies—Depression Scale; comp. CNS-Vital Signs test, computerized Central Nervous System-Vital Signs test; DSM IV, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual Fourth Edition; ES, Externalizing Scale; GHQ, General Health Questionnaire; GIS, Geographical Information System; GS, Green Space; H/I, hyperactivity/inattention; HRT-SE, Hit Reaction Time Standard Error; HS, Happiness with life as whole Scale; IQR, Interquartile Range; IS, Internalizing Scale; LEA, Living Environment Area; LSOA, Lower layer Super Output Area; LSS, Life Satisfaction Scale; K-CPT, Kiddies Continuous Performance Task; NDVI, Normalized Difference Vegetation Index; nSES, neigborhood Socio-Economic Status; PedsQL, Pediatric Quality of Life scale; PM2.5, Particulate Matter > 2.5 µm; PRS, Perceived Restorativeness Scale; SA2, Statistical Area 2; SAVI, Soil-Adjusted Vegetation Index; SDQ, Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire; SES, Socio-Economic Status (i.e., family income, parental education and/or parental employment); TCI, Tree Cover Index; TDIW, Ten Domain Index of Happiness; TDS, Total Difficulties Scale; VCF, Vegetation Continuous Fields.