Villanueva Karen, Badland Hannah, Kvalsvig Amanda, O'Connor Meredith, Christian Hayley, Woolcock Geoffrey, Giles-Corti Billie, Goldfeld Sharon
Murdoch Children's Research Institute, The Royal Children's Hospital, Parkville, Victoria, Australia; McCaughey VicHealth Community Well-being Unit, School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne, Carlton, Victoria, Australia.
McCaughey VicHealth Community Well-being Unit, School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne, Carlton, Victoria, Australia.
Acad Pediatr. 2016 Jan-Feb;16(1):10-9. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2015.09.006. Epub 2015 Nov 25.
Healthy child development is determined by a combination of physical, social, family, individual, and environmental factors. Thus far, the majority of child development research has focused on the influence of individual, family, and school environments and has largely ignored the neighborhood context despite the increasing policy interest. Yet given that neighborhoods are the locations where children spend large periods of time outside of home and school, it is plausible the physical design of neighborhoods (built environment), including access to local amenities, can affect child development. The relatively few studies exploring this relationship support associations between child development and neighborhood destinations, green spaces, interaction with nature, traffic exposure, and housing density. These studies emphasize the need to more deeply understand how child development outcomes might be influenced by the neighborhood built environment. Pursuing this research space is well aligned with the current global movements on livable and child-friendly cities. It has direct public policy impact by informing planning policies across a range of sectors (urban design and planning, transport, public health, and pediatrics) to implement place-based interventions and initiatives that target children's health and development at the community level. We argue for the importance of exploring the effect of the neighborhood built environment on child development as a crucial first step toward informing urban design principles to help reduce developmental vulnerability in children and to set optimal child development trajectories early.
健康的儿童发展取决于身体、社会、家庭、个人和环境等多种因素的综合作用。到目前为止,大多数儿童发展研究都集中在个人、家庭和学校环境的影响上,尽管政策关注度不断提高,但在很大程度上忽视了邻里环境。然而,鉴于邻里是儿童在家和学校之外度过大量时间的场所,邻里的物理设计(建成环境),包括是否有当地便利设施,可能会影响儿童发展,这是有道理的。探索这种关系的相对较少的研究支持儿童发展与邻里目的地、绿地、与自然的互动、交通暴露和住房密度之间的关联。这些研究强调需要更深入地了解邻里建成环境可能如何影响儿童发展结果。开展这一研究领域与当前全球宜居和儿童友好型城市运动高度契合。它通过为一系列部门(城市设计与规划、交通、公共卫生和儿科学)的规划政策提供信息,以实施针对社区层面儿童健康和发展的基于地点的干预措施和倡议,从而产生直接的公共政策影响。我们认为,探索邻里建成环境对儿童发展的影响至关重要,这是朝着为城市设计原则提供信息迈出的关键第一步,以帮助减少儿童发展中的脆弱性,并尽早设定最佳的儿童发展轨迹。