Author:
de Vries Sjerp,ten Have Margreet,van Dorsselaer Saskia,van Wezep Manja,Hermans Tia,de Graaf Ron
Abstract
BackgroundPrevious studies revealed a relationship between residential green space availability and health, especially mental health. Studies on blue space are scarcer and results less conclusive.AimsTo investigate the hypotheses that green and blue space availability are negatively associated with anxiety and mood disorders, and positively associated with self-reported mental and general health.MethodHealth data were derived from a nationally representative survey (NEMESIS-2, n=6621), using a diagnostic interview to assess disorders. Green and blue space availability were expressed as percentages of the area within 1 km from one's home.ResultsThe hypotheses were confirmed, except for green space and mood disorders. Associations were generally stronger for blue space than for green space, with ORs up to 0.74 for a 10%-point increase.ConclusionsDespite the different survey design and health measures, the results largely replicate those of previous studies on green space. Blue space availability deserves more systematic attention.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
131 articles.
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