More green space is related to less antidepressant prescription rates in the Netherlands: A Bayesian geoadditive quantile regression approach

05/18/2018
by   Marco Helbich, et al.
0

Exposure to green space seems to be beneficial for self-reported mental health. In this study we used an objective health indicator, namely antidepressant prescription rates. Current studies rely exclusively upon mean regression models assuming linear associations. It is, however, plausible that the presence of green space is non-linearly related with different quantiles of the outcome antidepressant prescription rates. These restrictions may contribute to inconsistent findings. Our aim was to assess antidepressant prescription rates in relation to green space, and to analyze how the relationship varies non-linearly across different quantiles of antidepressant prescription rates. We used cross-sectional data for the year 2014 at a municipality level in the Netherlands. Ecological Bayesian geoadditive quantile regressions were fitted for the 15, 50, and 85 percent quantiles to estimate green space-prescription rate correlations, controlling for confounders. The results suggested that green space was overall inversely and non-linearly associated with antidepressant prescription rates. More important, the associations differed across the quantiles, although the variation was modest. Significant non-linearities were apparent: The associations were slightly positive in the lower quantile and strongly negative in the upper one. Our findings imply that an increased availability of green space within a municipality may contribute to a reduction in the number of antidepressant prescriptions dispensed. Green space is thus a central health and community asset, whilst a minimum level of 28 percent needs to be established for health gains. The highest effectiveness occurred at a municipality surface percentage higher than 79 percent. This inverse dose-dependent relation has important implications for setting future community-level health and planning policies.

READ FULL TEXT

page 9

page 22

research
07/16/2022

Home-made blues: Residential crowding and mental health in Beijing, China

Although residential crowding has many well-being implications, its conn...
research
02/04/2023

A Scalar-on-Quantile-Function Approach for Estimating Short-term Health Effects of Environmental Exposures

Environmental epidemiologic studies routinely utilize aggregate health o...
research
10/01/2020

Bayesian spatial modelling of terrestrial radiation in Switzerland

The geographic variation of terrestrial radiation can be exploited in ep...
research
06/03/2023

A Process of Dependent Quantile Pyramids

Despite the practicality of quantile regression (QR), simultaneous estim...
research
07/13/2021

Heterogeneous Effects in the Built Environment

We present an approach to estimate distance-dependent heterogeneous asso...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset