Whitley Rob, Prince Martin, Cargo Margaret
Division of Social and Trans-cultural Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, McGill University, 1033 Pine Avenue West, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A 1A1.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2005 Oct;59(10):893-7. doi: 10.1136/jech.2004.030353.
Previous quantitative research has suggested that there is a link between housing, the urban environment, and mental health. However, methodological and design issues make it difficult to disentangle the relative influence of dwelling specific and wider urban environmental influences on individual mental health. The aim of this study was to explore the link between the dwelling, the immediate urban environment, and mental health to generate a new conceptual framework by which understanding of dwelling and urban environmental influences on mental health can be advanced.
Qualitative interviews and focus groups were conducted with 32 inner city residents. Participants, stratified by sex and mental health status, were randomly recruited from a wider quantitative survey. An almost equal number of men and women as well as people with or without mental health problems participated, allowing for comparison of experience. Data were analysed inductively to generate an appropriate theoretical framework regarding dwelling and urban environmental influences on mental health.
An inner city neighbourhood of about 6200 people in north west London. Most of that population live in public housing.
The principal study finding is that between the dwelling unit and the neighbourhood unit, evidence was found for another meaningful contextual unit of analysis, the "residential bubble" through which effects on mental health can be mediated. The residential bubble describes a limited area of three dimensional space that surrounds a dwelling, encompassing immediate neighbours (above, below, and adjacent) and shared public space bordering the dwelling. Positive events and processes within the bubble had a beneficial influence on mental health whereas negative ones tended to have a damaging influence. These seemed to disproportionately have an impact on people with pre-existing mental health problems.
The concept of the "residential bubble" may be a meaningful new contextual unit of analysis in urban mental health. This may have important implications with regards to interventions and measurement development.
以往的定量研究表明,住房、城市环境与心理健康之间存在联系。然而,方法和设计问题使得难以厘清住宅特定影响和更广泛的城市环境影响对个体心理健康的相对影响。本研究的目的是探索住宅、直接的城市环境与心理健康之间的联系,以生成一个新的概念框架,借此推进对住宅和城市环境对心理健康影响的理解。
对32名内城区居民进行了定性访谈和焦点小组讨论。参与者按性别和心理健康状况分层,从范围更广的定量调查中随机招募。参与的男性和女性数量几乎相等,有心理健康问题和无心理健康问题的人都有参与,以便比较不同经历。对数据进行归纳分析,以生成一个关于住宅和城市环境对心理健康影响的适当理论框架。
伦敦西北部一个约有6200人的内城区社区。该社区的大多数居民居住在公共住房中。
主要研究发现是,在住宅单元和社区单元之间,发现了另一个有意义的背景分析单元,即“居住气泡”,通过它可以调节对心理健康的影响。居住气泡描述了围绕住宅的一个有限的三维空间区域,包括直接相邻的邻居(楼上、楼下和隔壁)以及与住宅相邻的共享公共空间。气泡内的积极事件和过程对心理健康有有益影响,而消极事件和过程往往有损害性影响。这些似乎对已有心理健康问题的人影响更大。
“居住气泡”的概念可能是城市心理健康中有意义的新背景分析单元。这可能对干预措施和测量方法的发展具有重要意义。