Toward integrating subjective well-being in environmental health impact assessments for healthy urban living: a conceptual and methodological exploration

Publication date

2026-02

Authors

Chen, Xuan
Hoek, GerardISNI 0000000394591966
Frijters, Paul
Dyer, Georgia M.C.
Gössling, Stefan
Khomenko, Sasha
Khreis, Haneen
Kolb, Eline
Mueller, Natalie
Staatsen, Brigit

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Introduction Environmental Health Impact Assessments (HIAs) can inform decisions about the health effects of policy-related changes in environmental exposures. Conventional health impact metrics, focusing on mortality, morbidity, and disability, neglect subjective well-being. We explored the need and feasibility of integrating well-being indicators such as happiness and life satisfaction into quantitative environmental HIAs. Methods Building on a multidisciplinary expert workshop and existing literature, we addressed (1) definitions and indicators of well-being, (2) pathways linking environmental exposures (air pollution, noise, extreme temperatures, and green space) to well-being, and (3) the strength of epidemiological evidence for these associations. We evaluated the challenges of integrating well-being indicators into environmental HIAs, and provided an exploratory example. Results We argue that including well-being in HIAs offers a more comprehensive view of health, aligning with policy goals focused on enhancing citizen’s well-being. The literature identifies plausible pathways linking exposures to well-being, whilst epidemiological evidence for associations between environmental exposures and well-being is limited, but suggestive. We propose conducting exploratory HIAs integrating well-being, especially for green space (n = 16 epidemiological studies) and air pollution (n = 18). We outline two practical integration strategies: (1) report well-being impacts separately as Well-being-Adjusted Life Years, and (2) incorporate well-being into existing health indicators such as Quality-Adjusted Life Years or Disability-Adjusted Life Years. Conclusions Inclusion of well-being into quantitative environmental HIAs presents a more comprehensive representation of health and well-being beyond indicators focusing on morbidity and mortality. However, the epidemiological evidence base regarding environmental exposures and well-being warrants further expansion.

Keywords

Air pollution, Extreme temperature, Green space, Health impact assessment, Life satisfaction, Noise, Subjective well-being, Urban environment, WELLBYS, General Environmental Science, SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities

Citation

Chen, X, Hoek, G, Frijters, P, Dyer, G M C, Gössling, S, Khomenko, S, Khreis, H, Kolb, E, Mueller, N, Staatsen, B, Vasconcelos, R C S D, Resendes, D S, van Kempen, E, White, M P, Vermeulen, R, Nieuwenhuijsen, M & Gehring, U 2026, 'Toward integrating subjective well-being in environmental health impact assessments for healthy urban living : a conceptual and methodological exploration', Environment International, vol. 208, 110067. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2026.110067