Department of Epidemiology and Health Monitoring of the Robert Koch Institute, Berlin; Social and Preventive Medicine, Universität Potsdam; Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Charité Universitätsmedizin, Berlin; School of Public Health, Boston University, MA, USA; Berlin Institute for Integration and Migration Research (BIM), Humboldt University of Berlin.
Dtsch Arztebl Int. 2017 Feb 24;114(8):121-127. doi: 10.3238/arztebl.2017.0121.
More than half of the global population currently lives in cities, with an increasing trend for further urbanization. Living in cities is associated with increased population density, traffic noise and pollution, but also with better access to health care and other commodities.
This review is based on a selective literature search, providing an overview of the risk factors for mental illness in urban centers.
Studies have shown that the risk for serious mental illness is generally higher in cities compared to rural areas. Epidemiological studies have associated growing up and living in cities with a considerably higher risk for schizophrenia. However, correlation is not causation and living in poverty can both contribute to and result from impairments associated with poor mental health. Social isolation and discrimination as well as poverty in the neighborhood contribute to the mental health burden while little is known about specific interactions between such factors and the built environment.
Further insights on the interaction between spatial heterogeneity of neighborhood resources and socio-ecological factors is warranted and requires interdisciplinary research.
目前,全球超过一半的人口居住在城市,城市人口还在不断增加。生活在城市中会增加人口密度、交通噪音和污染,但也能更方便地获得医疗保健和其他商品。
这篇综述基于选择性文献检索,概述了城市中心精神疾病的风险因素。
研究表明,与农村地区相比,城市中心人群患严重精神疾病的风险通常更高。流行病学研究表明,在城市中成长和生活与精神分裂症的风险显著增加有关。然而,相关并不意味着因果关系,生活贫困既可能导致也可能是与心理健康受损相关的原因。社会隔离和歧视以及邻里贫困都会增加精神健康负担,而对于这些因素与建筑环境之间的具体相互作用,人们知之甚少。
需要进行跨学科研究,进一步深入了解邻里资源的空间异质性与社会生态因素之间的相互作用。