Authors
Annemarie Ruijsbroek
Mariël Droomers
Hanneke Kruize
Elise van Kempen
Christopher Gidlow
Gemma Hurst
Sandra Andrusaityte
Mark Nieuwenhuijsen
Jolanda Maas
Wim Hardyns
Karien Stronks
Peter P. Groenewegen
Publication Date
2017
Publication Details
Ruijsbroek, A., Droomers, M., Kruize, H., van Kempen, E., Gidlow, C., Hurst, G., Andrusaityte, S., Nieuwenhuijsen, M., Maas, J., Hardyns, W., Stronks, K. & Groenewegen, PP. (2017). Does the health impact of exposure to neighbourhood green space differ between population groups? An explorative study in four European cities. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health,14(6), P. B. Tchounwou. 1-15. Switzerland: MDPI AG. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14060618
Abstract
It has been suggested that certain residents, such as those with a low socioeconomic status, the elderly, and women, may benefit more from the presence of neighbourhood green space than others. We tested this hypothesis for age, gender, educational level, and employment status in four European cities. Data were collected in Barcelona (Spain; n = 1002), Kaunas (Lithuania; n = 989), Doetinchem (The Netherlands; n = 847), and Stoke-on-Trent (UK; n = 933) as part of the EU-funded PHENOTYPE project. Surveys were used to measure mental and general health, individual characteristics, and perceived neighbourhood green space. Additionally, we used audit data about neighbourhood green space. In Barcelona, there were positive associations between neighbourhood green space and general health among low-educated residents. In the other cities and for the other population groups, there was little evidence that the association between health and neighbourhood green space differed between population groups. Overall, our study does not support the assumption that the elderly, women, and residents who are not employed full-time benefit more from neighbourhood green space than others. Only in the highly urbanised city of Barcelona did the low-educated group benefit from neighbourhood green spaces. Perhaps neighbourhood green spaces are more important for the health of low-educated residents in particularly highly urbanised areas. View Full-Text
School/Institute
Mary MacKillop Institute for Health Research
Document Type
Open Access Journal Article
Access Rights
Open Access
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.