Longitudinal associations between the neighborhood social, natural, and built environment and mental health: A systematic review with meta-analyses

Publication date

2022-09

Authors

Sui, YuwenISNI 0000000527706983
Ettema, DickISNI 0000000384297245
Helbich, MISNI 0000000443134439

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

This review aimed to assess the longitudinal associations between neighborhood social, natural, and built environments, and multiple mental health outcomes (i.e., depression, anxiety, common mental disorder, and pooled mental disorders). Of 6,785 records retrieved, 30 studies fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Meta-analytical results primarily obtained from developed country studies showed that composite neighborhood socioeconomic status was negatively associated with depression (p = 0.007) and pooled mental disorders (p = 0.002), while neighborhood urbanicity was positively associated with depression (p = 0.012) and pooled mental disorders (p = 0.005). Future longitudinal studies with similar designs and standardized exposure assessments are warranted.

Keywords

Cohort studies, Exposure, Mental disorders, Panel studies, Residential neighborhood, Health(social science), Sociology and Political Science, Life-span and Life-course Studies

Citation

Sui, Y, Ettema, D & Helbich, M 2022, 'Longitudinal associations between the neighborhood social, natural, and built environment and mental health: A systematic review with meta-analyses', Health and Place, vol. 77, 102893, pp. 1-13. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2022.102893