| Literature DB >> 32153435 |
Lauren E Murphy1, Helen E Jack2, Tessa L Concepcion3, Pamela Y Collins1,3.
Abstract
The majority (55%) of the world's population lives in urban environments. Of relevance to global mental health, the rapid growth in urban populations around the world and the attendant risks coincide with the presence of the largest population of adolescents the global community has seen to date. Recent reviews on the effects of the urban environment on mental health report a greater risk of depression, anxiety, and some psychotic disorders among urban dwellers. Increased risk for mental disorders is associated with concentrated poverty, low social capital, social segregation, and other social and environmental adversities that occur more frequently in cities. To address these problems, urban adolescent mental health requires attention from decision makers as well as advocates who seek to establish sustainable cities. We examine opportunities to increase the prominence of urban adolescent mental health on the global health and development agenda using Shiffman and Smith's framework for policy priorities, and we explore approaches to increasing its relevance for urban health and development policy communities. We conclude with suggestions for expanding the community of actors who guide the field and bridging the fields of mental health and urban development to meet urban adolescent mental health needs.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents; global development; health policy; mental health; social determinants; sustainable cities; sustainable development goals; urban health
Year: 2020 PMID: 32153435 PMCID: PMC7044235 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
The New Urban Agenda and elements that support adolescent mental health: mental health sequelae and interventions.
| NUA vision for cities | Elements that support adolescent mental health and wellbeing | Mental health sequelae | Relevant Interventions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cities fulfill their social function, including right to housing and an adequate standard of living, access to drinking water and sanitation, food security and nutrition, health, education, mobility, energy, air quality, livelihoods | Access to adequate housing | Adequate housing associated with improved mental health,( | Mental Health Promotion among adolescents in schools using life skills education ( |
| Food security and nutrition | Lack of food security and poor nutrition are associated with psychological distress, ( | ||
| Education | Quality education supports cognitive development and mental health ( | ||
| Health | Timely access to health services enable early identification and management of mental health problems ( | ||
| Cities are participatory, promote civic engagement, engender a sense of belonging and ownership, foster social cohesion, prioritize safe, inclusive quality public spaces | Promote participatory engagement | Adolescence is a time for building agency, and youth civic engagement is positively associated with mental health into adulthood ( | School-based life skills training ( |
| Social cohesion and belonging | Social connectedness (peers, school, family) promotes adolescent mental health ( | ||
| Safe public spaces | Safe public spaces are essential for adolescent development, socialization, and mental health ( | ||
| Cities achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls and prevent discrimination, violence, and harassment | Reduced exposure to gender-based violence | Adolescents, particularly young women, who experience gender-based violence are at higher risk of poor mental health outcomes ( | Intimate partner violence prevention ( |
| Reduced exposure to gender-based discrimination | Gender-based discrimination has negative effects on youth mental health ( | ||
| Cities meet the challenges and opportunities of inclusive and sustained economic growth | Reduce youth unemployment | Youth employment has positive effects on both youth mental health ( | Economic empowerment intervention ( |
| Promote age- and gender-responsive planning and investment for sustainable, safe accessible urban mobility | Increased urban mobility for youth | A built environment which enables safe transport and mobility has positive impacts on youth mental health ( | Transport-related factors that could impact public mental health ( |