The Borneo Post

Living near green space could boost teens’ and seniors’ mental health

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NEW US research has found that living just a few blocks away from “green space” could be good for a teenager’s mental health.

Carried out by researcher­s at the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, the new study looked at data gathered from the California Health Interview Survey carried out between 2011 to 2014, which included a total of 81,102 households, composed of 4,538 teenagers and 81,102 adults.

The households’ surroundin­g greenness was measured using a satellite- generated map showing the density of vegetation.

The findings, published in the journal Health & Place, showed that when teenagers lived within 350 meters (a radius of around two city blocks) of a large amount of greenness, a level found in the top 25 percentile, they are 36 per cent less likely to have serious psychologi­cal distress than a teen living in an area with greenness in the bottom 25 percentile.

Higher levels of exposure to greenness were also significan­tly associated with lower rates of serious psychologi­cal distress in adults age 65 and older.

However, greenness did not appear to have the same benefits for younger adults.

The researcher­s cite previous research, which suggests that greenness may have a stronger effect on teens and seniors as they are more likely to stay within their neighbourh­oods and have a stronger response to their local environmen­t.

Co-author of the study Ying-Ying Meng also added that as teenagers’ brains are still developing, the finding that teens benefit more from being near green space is a significan­t one. — Relaxnews

 ??  ?? Living a few blocks away from green space could be good for the mental health of teenagers and seniors, according to new research.
Living a few blocks away from green space could be good for the mental health of teenagers and seniors, according to new research.

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