4.6 Article

Spatial scale analysis for the relationships between the built environment and cardiovascular disease based on multi-source data

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HEALTH & PLACE
卷 83, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2023.103048

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Built environment; Cardiovascular disease; Multi -source data; Street view images; MGWR

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This study employed multiscale geographically weighted regression to examine the relationship between 18 variables and cardiovascular disease. The results showed that multiscale geographically weighted regression was a better fit for the association analysis between the built environment and cardiovascular diseases. The built environment variables related to cardiovascular diseases can be divided into global variables and local variables, and at specific spatial scales, global variables had trivial spatial variation while local variables showed significant gradients.
To examine what built environment characteristics improve the health outcomes of human beings is always a hot issue. While a growing literature has analyzed the link between the built environment and health, few studies have investigated this relationship across different spatial scales. In this study, eighteen variables were selected from multi-source data and reduced to eight built environment attributes using principal component analysis. These attributes included socioeconomic deprivation, urban density, street walkability, land-use diversity, blue-green space, transportation convenience, ageing, and street insecurity. Multiscale geographically weighted regression was then employed to clarify how these attributes relate to cardiovascular disease at different scales. The results indicated that: (1) multiscale geographically weighted regression showed a better fit of the associ-ation between the built environment and cardiovascular diseases than other models (e.g., ordinary least squares and geographically weighted regression), and is thus an effective approach for multiscale analysis of the built environment and health associations; (2) built environment variables related to cardiovascular diseases can be divided into global variables with large scales (e.g., socioeconomic deprivation, street walkability, land-use di-versity, blue-green space, transportation convenience, and ageing) and local variables with small scales (e.g., urban density and street insecurity); and (3) at specific spatial scales, global variables had trivial spatial variation across the area, while local variables showed significant gradients. These findings provide greater insight into the association between the built environment and lifestyle-related diseases in densely populated cities, emphasizing the significance of hierarchical and place-specific policy formation in health interventions.

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