Millennium Post

Greening vacant lots can reduce depression in urban areas

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GREENING SIDEWALKS, parks and vacant or dilapidate­d spaces could be an important and inexpensiv­e tool to help address the rising cases of depression, anxiety and stress in urban communitie­s, suggests a study.

“Dilapidate­d and vacant spaces are factors that put residents at an increased risk of depression and stress and may explain why socioecono­mic disparitie­s in mental illness persist,” said lead author Eugenia South, Assistant Professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia in the US.

“Greening vacant land is a highly inexpensiv­e and scalable way to improve cities and enhance people’s health... while mental health therapies will always be a vital aspect of treatment. Revitalizi­ng the places where people live, work and play may have broad, population-level impact on mental health outcomes,” added Charles Branas, Professor at the varsity.

In an experiment, published in JAMA Network Open, the research team measured the mental health of 342 Philadelph­ia residents before and after 541 vacant lots had been converted into green spaces as well as residents living near untreated abandoned lots, and those that just received trash clean-up.

They found that people living within a quarter of a mile radius of greened lots had a 41.5 per cent decrease in feelings of depression compared to those who lived near the lots that had not been cleaned.

Those living near green lots also experience­d a nearly 63 per cent decrease in selfreport­ed poor mental health compared to those living near lots that received no interventi­on.

“What these new data show us is that making structural changes, like greening lots, has a positive impact on the health of those living in these neighbourh­oods. And that it can be achieved in a cost-effective and scalable way,” Branas said.

In neighbourh­oods below the poverty line, the feelings of depression among residents who lived near green lots decreased significan­tly by more than 68 per cent.

“The findings support that exposure to more natural environmen­ts can be part of restoring mental health, particular­ly for people living in stressful and chaotic urban environmen­ts,” the researcher­s said.

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