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首页> 外文期刊>The Lancet Planetary Health >Green environment and incident depression in South Africa: a geospatial analysis and mental health implications in a resource-limited setting
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Green environment and incident depression in South Africa: a geospatial analysis and mental health implications in a resource-limited setting

机译:南非的绿色环境和突发事件:在资源有限的环境中进行地理空间分析和心理健康影响

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Summary Background Unprecedented levels of habitat transformation and rapid urbanisation are changing the way individuals interrelate with the natural environment in developing countries with high economic disparities. Although the potential benefit of green environments for mental health has been recognised, population-level evidence to this effect is scarce. We investigated the effect of green living environment in potentially countering incident depression in a nationally representative survey in South Africa. Methods We used panel data from the South African National Income Dynamics Study (SA-NIDS). Our study used SA-NIDS data from three waves: wave 1 (2008), wave 2 (2010), and wave 3 (2012). Households were sampled on the basis of a stratified two-stage cluster design. In the first stage, 400 primary sampling units were selected for inclusion. In the second stage, two clusters of 12 dwelling units each were drawn from within each primary sampling unit (or 24 dwelling units per unit). Household and individual adult questionnaires were administered to participants. The main outcome, incident depression (ie, incident cohort of 11?156 study participants without significant depression symptoms at their first entry into SA-NIDS), was assessed in the adult survey via a ten item version of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale; a total score of ten or higher was used as a cutoff to indicate significant depressive symptoms. Each participant was assigned a value for green living space via a satellite-derived normalised difference vegetation index (NDVI) based on the GPS coordinates of their household location. Findings Overall, we found uneven benefit of NDVI on incident depression among our study participants. Although the green living environment showed limited benefit across the study population as a whole, our final analysis based on logistic regression models showed that higher NDVI was a predictor of lower incident depression among middle-income compared with low-income participants (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 0·98, 0·97–0·99, p0·0001), although when this analysis was broken down by race, its positive effect was particularly evident amongst African individuals. Living in rural areas was linked to lower odds of incident depression (aOR 0·71, 0·55–0·92, p=0·011) compared with study participants residing in urban informal areas that often lack formal planning. Interpretation Our results imply the importance of green environments for mental wellbeing in sub-Saharan African settings experiencing rapid urbanisation, economic and epidemiological transition, reaffirming the need to incorporate environmental services and benefits for sustainable socioeconomic development. Funding South African Medical Research Council, National Institutes of Health, and Academy of Finland.
机译:背景技术前所未有的生境转变和快速的城市化水平正在改变着个人与自然经济差异很大的发展中国家与自然环境的相互联系的方式。尽管人们已经认识到绿色环境对精神健康的潜在好处,但这种作用的人群水平的证据却很少。在南非的一项全国代表性调查中,我们调查了绿色生活环境在应对潜在抑郁事件中的作用。方法我们使用了来自南非国民收入动态研究(SA-NIDS)的面板数据。我们的研究使用了三个波浪的SA-NIDS数据:波浪1(2008),波浪2(2010)和波浪3(2012)。在分层的两阶段聚类设计的基础上对住户进行了抽样。在第一阶段,选择了400个主要抽样单位。在第二阶段,从每个主要采样单元(或每个单元24个居住单元)中抽取两个集群,每个集群有12个居住单元。对参与者进行家庭和成人成人问卷调查。成人抑郁症的主要结果是通过流行病学研究中心抑郁量表的十项版本在成人调查中评估的,即事件抑郁(即11?156研究参与者的队列,首次进入SA-NIDS时无明显抑郁症状) ;总分为10或更高被用作表明严重抑郁症状的临界值。每个参与者都通过基于其家庭所在地的GPS坐标的卫星归一化差异植被指数(NDVI)分配了绿色居住空间的值。总的来说,我们发现研究参与者中NDVI对抑郁症的获益不均。尽管绿色生活环境在整个研究人群中显示出有限的收益,但我们基于逻辑回归模型的最终分析显示,与低收入参与者相比,较高的NDVI是中等收入人群中较低的抑郁事件发生率的预测指标(调整后的优势比[ aOR] 0·98、0·97-0.99,p <0·0001),尽管当按种族细分该分析时,其积极影响在非洲个体中尤为明显。与居住在缺乏正规计划的城市非正式地区的研究参与者相比,生活在农村地区与发生抑郁症的几率较低(aOR 0·71、0·55-0.92,p = 0·011)。解释我们的结果表明,在经历快速城市化,经济和流行病学转变的撒哈拉以南非洲地区,绿色环境对于心理健康的重要性,重申需要将环境服务和收益纳入可持续社会经济发展。资助南非医学研究委员会,国家卫生研究院和芬兰科学院。

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