Allard-Poesi Florence, Matos Lorena B S, Massu Justine
Univ Paris Est Creteil, IRG, F-94010 Creteil, France.
Health Place. 2022 Mar;74:102759. doi: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2022.102759. Epub 2022 Mar 4.
A growing amount of research shows a positive association between urban nature and urban residents' psychological and physical well-being and quality of life. With its focus on specific dimensions of well-being and reliance either on large-scale objective data sets or experimental and comparative designs, prior research does not explicitly address the relationships between the various types of urban nature as experienced by citizens and their overall well-being. The present research proposes a model for the potential influence of the perceptions of the type and characteristics of nature close to urban residences and citizens' well-being via their frequency of exposure to, and their activities in, nature. Using WHOQOL-26 as a measure of well-being and constructing or adapting measurements for the other variables, a questionnaire was designed and administered among a sample of 2500 French urban residents. Psychometric tests, structural equation modeling, and mediation analyses were conducted on the collected data. The results show that: (1) The perceived characteristics of nature near urban residences have both direct and indirect influences on the psychological, physical, environmental, and resources-related dimensions of citizens' well-being; (2) Less domesticated nature-forests, fields, and scrubland-contributes to psychological well-being by favoring light or calm activities in nature, and to physical well-being by supporting exposure to nature. Such wilder nature is also positively associated with the perceived quality of urban residences; (3) Small spots of nature, located close to one's residence-a balcony, a patio, or a roof garden-make a similar but smaller contribution to well-being; (4) Domesticated nature-city gardens and parks-contribute marginally to the physical and resources-related dimensions of well-being. These results complement past research on the perceived characteristics of nature by showing how nature, as experienced by urban citizens, refers to different vegetation spaces. They also invite urban planners and policymakers to acknowledge the positive association between "wilder" natural spaces and well-being.
越来越多的研究表明,城市自然环境与城市居民的身心健康及生活质量之间存在正相关关系。以往的研究侧重于幸福的特定维度,且要么依赖大规模客观数据集,要么采用实验和比较设计,并未明确探讨市民所体验到的各类城市自然环境与他们整体幸福感之间的关系。本研究提出了一个模型,用以探讨城市居民住所附近自然环境的类型和特征认知,通过居民接触自然的频率及其在自然中的活动,对居民幸福感产生的潜在影响。以世界卫生组织生活质量量表简表(WHOQOL-26)作为幸福感的衡量指标,并为其他变量构建或调整测量方法,设计了一份问卷,并对2500名法国城市居民进行了调查。对收集到的数据进行了心理测量测试、结构方程建模和中介分析。结果表明:(1)城市居民住所附近自然环境的感知特征对居民幸福感的心理、身体、环境和资源相关维度具有直接和间接影响;(2)较少人工驯化的自然环境——森林、田野和灌木丛——通过促进在自然中进行轻松或平静的活动,对心理健康有益,通过支持接触自然,对身体健康有益。这种更野性的自然环境也与城市居民住所的感知质量呈正相关;(3)位于住所附近的小块自然区域——阳台、庭院或屋顶花园——对幸福感有类似但较小的贡献;(4)人工驯化的自然环境——城市花园和公园——对幸福感的身体和资源相关维度贡献较小。这些结果通过展示城市居民所体验到的自然如何指代不同的植被空间,补充了以往关于自然感知特征的研究。它们还促使城市规划者和政策制定者认识到“更野性”的自然空间与幸福感之间的正相关关系。