Sex/Gender Differences in the Association between Residential Green Space and Self-Rated Health—A Sex/Gender-Focused Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- whether sex/gender theoretical concepts were addressed in the design of epidemiological studies on the impact of perceived or objective residential green or blue space on self-rated health,
- whether and how sex-linked biology and/or gender were defined and operationalized in these studies,
- whether validity of exposure and outcome metrics were assessed by sex/gender,
- whether sex/gender differences were observed in the association of perceived or objective residential green or blue space and self-rated health,
- whether study results were discussed against the background of sex/gender theoretical concepts.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Literature Search
2.2. Selection Process
2.3. Eligibility Criteria
2.4. Evaluation of the Studies
2.5. Synthesis of the Results
3. Results
3.1. Quality of the Included Studies
3.2. General Study Characteristics
3.3. Operationalisation of Sex/Gender, Source of Sex/Gender Data, Sex/Gender Terminology and Validity of Exposure and Outcome Metrics in Sex/Gender Groups
3.4. Sex/Gender Differences in the Association between Objectively Measured Green Space and Self-Rated Health
3.5. Sex/Gender Differences in the Association between Subjectively Assessed Green Space and Self-Rated Health
3.6. Consideration of Other Sociodemographic or Socioeconomic Dimensions
3.7. Rationale for Testing Sex/Gender Differences and the Usage of Sex/Gender-Theoretical Concepts in the Discussion of the Results
4. Discussion
4.1. Consideration of Sex/Gender-Theoretical Concepts in Study Design
4.2. Sex/Gender Differences in the Association of Green Space and Self-Rated Health
4.3. Consideration of Sex/Gender-Theoretical Concepts in Discussion of Results
4.4. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study Publication | Study Design | Study Population | Measurement of Self-Rated Health | Measurement of Green Space | Measurement of Blue Space | Operationalisation of Sex/Gender | Source of Sex/Gender Data | Terminology |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Björk et al. [27] | Cross-sectional, Public Health Survey in southern Sweden, 2004 | N = 24,819, female = 54.3%, suburban/rural, Sweden | 7-point-likert scale (very poor to very good) | Objective: Land and vegetation cover (CORINE), 100 m–300 m buffer | no | binary | source not clearly defined, but registry information was initially used to contact equal numbers of women and men via a mailed questionnaire | gender |
Dadvand et al. [28] | Cross-sectional, Health Survey of Barcelona, 2011 | N = 3461, female = 52.1% urban, Spain | 5-point-likert scale (excellent to bad) | Objective: NDVI, 100 m–500 m buffer; land cover map, 300 m, Subjective: Park within 10 min walk (self-report) | no | binary | source not clearly defined, but registry information was initially used to select subjects for a face-to-face interview in a way to represent age and sex structure of districts | sex |
Orban et al. [29] | Cross-sectional, Heinz Nixdorf Recall Study, 2000–2003 | N = 4480, female = 49.7%, urban, Germany | 5-point-likert scale (very good to very poor) | Objective: NDVI, 100 m–1000 m buffer | no | binary | source not clearly defined, only general statement that data was obtained through personal interviews and questionnaires | gender and sex interchangeably |
Reklaitiene et al. [30] | Cross-sectional, PHENOTYPE, 2006-2008 | N = 6944, female = 54.6%, urban, Lithuania | 5-point-likert scale (very good to very poor) | Objective: Land cover map, <300 m, 300 m–999 m, ≥1 km Subjective: Park use (self-report) | no | binary | source not clearly defined, but registry information was initially used to draw a random sample stratified by gender and age, data was obtained through self-reported questionnaires | gender |
Ruijsbroek et al. [31] | Cross-sectional, PHENOTYPE, 2013 | N = 3771, female = 55.5%, urban, Spain, Lithuania, Netherlands, United Kingdom | 5-point-likert scale (excellent to poor) | Objective: Land cover map (Urban Atlas) Subjective: Perceived amount and quality of green space (self-report) | yes | binary | source not clearly defined, only general statement that data was obtained through face-to-face interviews or a postal questionnaire | gender and sex interchangeably |
Stronegger et al. [32] | Cross-sectional, 2005 | N = 997, female = 50.8%, urban, Austria | 5-point-likert scale (very good to very bad) | Subjective: Perceived amount of green space as part of environmental quality | no | binary | question about gender was asked in a computer-assisted telephone interview | gender |
Triguero-Mas et al. [33] | Cross-sectional, Catalonia Health Survey ESCA, 2010-2012 | N = 8793, female = 50.1%, urban, Spain | 5-point-likert scale (excellent to bad) | Objective: NDVI, 300 m buffer; land cover map, 300 m | yes | binary | source not clearly defined, only general statement that data was obtained through interviews | gender |
Study Publication | Rationale for Testing Sex/Gender Differences | Analysis of Sex/Gender Differences | Results for Objectively Measured Green Space | Results for Subjectively Perceived Green Space | Discussion of Sex/Gender Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Björk et al. [27] | Previous research on effect modification by sex/gender | Regression analysis, Test for interaction by sex/gender | No effect modification | Not applicable | Sex/gender and radius of action in residential environments |
Dadvand et al. [28] | Assumption of effect modification by sex/gender | Regression analysis, Stratification by sex/gender | Residential surrounding greenness within 250 m buffer: Positive association with good self-rated health in men, but not in women | Subjective proximity to green spaces: Positive association with good self-rated health in women, In men OR in the same order of magnitude, but not statistically significant | Sex/gender and green space usage |
Orban et al. [29] | Not specified | Regression analysis, Stratification by sex/gender | No effect modification | Not applicable | Not specified |
Reklaitiene et al. [30] | Not specified | Regression analysis, Stratification by sex/gender | Park use < 4 h/week: No effect modification Park use ≥ 4 h/week: association of distance to park with poor self-rated health in women, In men OR in the same order of magnitude in highest distance category, but not statistically significant | Not specified | |
Ruijsbroek et al. [31] | Previous research on effect modification by sex/gender | Multilevel regression analysis, Test for interaction by sex/gender | No effect modification | No effect modification | Sex/gender roles (care activities, radius of action in residential environments) |
Stronegger et al. [32] | Not specified | Regression analysis, Stratification by sex/gender | Not applicable | No effect modification | Not specified |
Triguero-Mas et al. [33] | Previous research on effect modification by sex/gender | Regression analysis, Test for interaction by sex/gender and stratification by sex/gender | Surrounding greenness within 300 m: negative association with poor self-rated health in women, in men OR in the same order of magnitude, but not statistically significant; Access to green space: no effect modification | Not applicable | Sex/gender roles (care activities) |
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Bolte, G.; Nanninga, S.; Dandolo, L., on behalf of the INGER Study Group. Sex/Gender Differences in the Association between Residential Green Space and Self-Rated Health—A Sex/Gender-Focused Systematic Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 4818. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16234818
Bolte G, Nanninga S, Dandolo L on behalf of the INGER Study Group. Sex/Gender Differences in the Association between Residential Green Space and Self-Rated Health—A Sex/Gender-Focused Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2019; 16(23):4818. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16234818
Chicago/Turabian StyleBolte, Gabriele, Sarah Nanninga, and Lisa Dandolo on behalf of the INGER Study Group. 2019. "Sex/Gender Differences in the Association between Residential Green Space and Self-Rated Health—A Sex/Gender-Focused Systematic Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 23: 4818. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16234818
APA StyleBolte, G., Nanninga, S., & Dandolo, L., on behalf of the INGER Study Group. (2019). Sex/Gender Differences in the Association between Residential Green Space and Self-Rated Health—A Sex/Gender-Focused Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 16(23), 4818. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16234818