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A bit of greenery near our homes can cut the "health gap" between rich and poor, say researchers from two Scottish universities.
Even small parks in the heart of our cities can protect us from strokes and heart disease, perhaps by cutting stress or boosting exercise.
Their study, in The Lancet, matched data about hundreds of thousands of deaths to green spaces in local areas. Councils should introduce more greenery to improve wellbeing, they said.Across the country, there are "health inequalities" related to income and social deprivation, which generally reflect differences in lifestyle, diet, and, to some extent, access to medical care.
This means that in general, people living in poorer areas are more
likely to be unhealthy, and die earlier. However, the researchers found
that living near parks, woodland or other open spaces helped reduce
these inequalities, regardless of social class.
When the records
of more than 366,000 people who died between 2001 and 2005 were
analysed, it revealed that even tiny green spaces in the areas in which
they lived made a big difference to their risk of fatal diseases.
Although the effect was greatest for those living surrounded by the
most greenery, with the "health gap" roughly halved compared with those
with the fewest green spaces around them, there was still a noticeable
difference.
Stress buster
The change was
particularly clear in areas such as heart disease and stroke,
supporting the idea that the presence of green spaces encourages people
to be more active.
However, the researchers, Dr Richard Mitchell
from Glasgow University, and Dr Frank Popham, from the University of St
Andrews, said that other studies had suggested that contact with green
spaces also helped reduce blood pressure and stress levels, perhaps
even promoting faster healing after surgery.
They wrote: "The
implications of this study are clear - environments that promote good
health might be crucial in the fight to reduce health inequalities."
They
called for planning authorities to consider making more green spaces
available to improve the health and wellbeing of their residents.
In
an accompanying article in The Lancet, Dr Terry Hartig, from the
Institute for Housing and Urban Research at Uppsala University in
Sweden, wrote: "This study offers valuable evidence that green space
does more than 'pretty up' the neighbourhood - it appears to have real
effects on health inequality, of a kind that politicians and health
authorities should take seriously."
David Tibbatts, from
GreenSpace, a charity which promotes parks in urban areas, said that
they were threatened by "decades of decline" in some areas.
"The
study confirms what we have been saying for many years - parks are
important for health and everyone should have access to high quality,
beautiful and vibrant green spaces. "Unfortunately, despite the
benefits green spaces bring to communities, our research has shown a
decline in park services that has spread across more than 30 years.
"Despite
increase recognition of their role in areas such as improved health,
far too many parks teams find their revenue budgets are still under
continuous threat."
Professor Barbara Maher from the Lancaster
Environment Centre said her research had shown that roadside trees
improve health by protecting people from pollution.
"Urban and
roadside trees may be an under-used resource both in terms of acting as
natural 'pollution monitors' and actively screening people, especially,
children and the already ill, from the damaging health effects of
particle pollution," she said.
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