4.7 Article

Non-linear association between residential greenness and general health among old adults in China

Journal

LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING
Volume 223, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2022.104406

Keywords

Green spaces; General health; Inversely U-shaped curve; Air pollution; Light pollution at night; The 2015 mini-census

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41871140, 41971194, 42001161]
  2. Program for Guangdong Introducing Innovative and Enterpreneurial Teams [2017ZT07X355]

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This study examined the association between residential greenness and self-rated general health (SGH) of older adults in China. Higher residential greenness was found to be positively associated with good health, with an inverted U-shaped relationship. The association was stronger for older adults living in urban areas, females, older age groups, singles or divorced or widowed individuals, those with lower education levels, and those living in households with higher car value. Greenness was also found to mitigate the adverse effects of air pollution and outdoor light pollution on older adults' health.
While a plethora of evidence has suggested the existence of salutogenic effects of exposure to residential greenness, including mitigating residents' exposure to environmental stressors (the mitigation effect), relevant evidence of these effects in a Chinese context remains limited and inconsistent. This study explored the association between residential greenness and older adults' self-rated general health (SGH) in China, particularly focusing on the potential non-linear association, using the microdata sample from the Chinese one-percent national population sample survey. We further examined whether the association varied significantly according to neighbourhood urbanicity and individual socio-demographic characteristics, and investigated whether residential greenness can mitigate against the detrimental effects of air pollution, higher temperature, and outdoor light pollution at night on older adults' health. We found that higher residential greenness was positively associated with the odds of reporting good health, and a greenness-SGH inverted U-shaped relationship was observed, with a turning point at an NDVI value of 0.40. The greenness-SGH association was stronger for older adults who resided in urban areas, were female, older (>= 80 years), were single or divorced or widowed, had elementary or secondary school education, and lived in households with a car valued over yen 200,000. We also found that greenness can help mitigate the adverse effects of air pollution and outdoor light pollution at night on older adults' SGH. Our findings suggest that providing green infrastructure in a residential environment can promote older people's health through mitigating the hazards of environmental contaminants in a rapidly urbanizing and developing country.

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