An exploration of the associations between urban natural environments and indicators of mental and physical health.

Natural environments, namely green and blue spaces, have been found to have positive influences on mental health outcomes globally. As the contribution of poor mental health to the disease burden increases, the mechanisms through which natural environments may improve health are of growing importanc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nutsford, Daniel
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Geography 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/9279
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-92792015-03-30T15:31:34ZAn exploration of the associations between urban natural environments and indicators of mental and physical health.Nutsford, Danielmental well-beingvisibility analysisnatural environmentsurban planningpublic healthNatural environments, namely green and blue spaces, have been found to have positive influences on mental health outcomes globally. As the contribution of poor mental health to the disease burden increases, the mechanisms through which natural environments may improve health are of growing importance. This study creates a novel visibility index methodology and investigates whether i) views of natural environments and ii) access to natural environments, are associated with psychological stress and physical activity in Wellington, New Zealand. It also builds upon the work conducted in New Zealand as the first study to investigate links between blue space and mental health and provides an insight into the mechanisms through which increased natural environments may improve health. Individual level data for 442 individuals from the New Zealand Health Survey was obtained and Geographical Information Systems (GIS) were used to investigate whether area-level exposure to natural environments influenced their psychological stress and levels of physical activity. Results from regression analysis indicate that increased distant visible green space (beyond 3km), visible blue space, and a combination of green and blue spaces from neighbourhood centroids reduce psychological stress. Some access measures to natural environments were found to have positive associations with psychological stress, however increased proximal access to green space was associated with decreased physical activity. The findings conclude that the visibility of natural environments appears to have stronger associations with stress reduction than access to them. The findings of this paper should influence urban development and inform decision and policy making, particularly the development and/or relocation of health related facilities.University of Canterbury. Geography2014-06-16T23:21:55Z2014-06-16T23:21:55Z2014Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/9279enNZCUCopyright Daniel Nutsfordhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic mental well-being
visibility analysis
natural environments
urban planning
public health
spellingShingle mental well-being
visibility analysis
natural environments
urban planning
public health
Nutsford, Daniel
An exploration of the associations between urban natural environments and indicators of mental and physical health.
description Natural environments, namely green and blue spaces, have been found to have positive influences on mental health outcomes globally. As the contribution of poor mental health to the disease burden increases, the mechanisms through which natural environments may improve health are of growing importance. This study creates a novel visibility index methodology and investigates whether i) views of natural environments and ii) access to natural environments, are associated with psychological stress and physical activity in Wellington, New Zealand. It also builds upon the work conducted in New Zealand as the first study to investigate links between blue space and mental health and provides an insight into the mechanisms through which increased natural environments may improve health. Individual level data for 442 individuals from the New Zealand Health Survey was obtained and Geographical Information Systems (GIS) were used to investigate whether area-level exposure to natural environments influenced their psychological stress and levels of physical activity. Results from regression analysis indicate that increased distant visible green space (beyond 3km), visible blue space, and a combination of green and blue spaces from neighbourhood centroids reduce psychological stress. Some access measures to natural environments were found to have positive associations with psychological stress, however increased proximal access to green space was associated with decreased physical activity. The findings conclude that the visibility of natural environments appears to have stronger associations with stress reduction than access to them. The findings of this paper should influence urban development and inform decision and policy making, particularly the development and/or relocation of health related facilities.
author Nutsford, Daniel
author_facet Nutsford, Daniel
author_sort Nutsford, Daniel
title An exploration of the associations between urban natural environments and indicators of mental and physical health.
title_short An exploration of the associations between urban natural environments and indicators of mental and physical health.
title_full An exploration of the associations between urban natural environments and indicators of mental and physical health.
title_fullStr An exploration of the associations between urban natural environments and indicators of mental and physical health.
title_full_unstemmed An exploration of the associations between urban natural environments and indicators of mental and physical health.
title_sort exploration of the associations between urban natural environments and indicators of mental and physical health.
publisher University of Canterbury. Geography
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/9279
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