Department of Human Geography and Spatial Planning, Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, Princetonlaan 8a, 3584 CB Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Department of Interdisciplinary Social Science, Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences, Utrecht University, Padualaan 14, 3584 CH Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Environ Int. 2023 Sep;179:108142. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2023.108142. Epub 2023 Aug 12.
Cross-sectional studies have found associations between neighbourhood environments and adolescent mental health, but the few longitudinal studies mainly focused on single exposure-based analyses and rarely assessed the mental health associations with environmental changes.
We assessed longitudinal within- and between-person associations of multiple neighbourhood time-varying physical and social environmental exposures with externalising and internalising problems throughout adolescence.
We used four waves of TRAILS (Tracking Adolescents' Individual Lives Survey) data on self-reported externalising and internalising problems at ages 11, 13, 16, and 19 among 2,135 adolescents in the Netherlands. We measured residence-based time-varying environmental exposures, including green space, air pollution (fine particulate matter (PM)), noise, deprivation, and social fragmentation. We fitted random-effect within-between regression models to assess the environment-mental health associations.
At the within-person level, an interquartile range (IQR) increase in PM was associated with a 0.056 IQR (95% CI: 0.014, 0.099) increase in externalising problems, while an IQR social fragmentation increase was associated with a 0.010 IQR (95% CI: -0.020, -0.001) decrease in externalising problems. Stratification revealed that the association with PM was significant only for movers, whereas the association with social fragmentation remained only for non-movers. At the between-person level, an IQR higher noise was associated with a 0.100 IQR (95% CI: 0.031, 0.169) more externalising problems, while higher deprivation (β = 0.080; 95% CI: 0.022, 0.138) and lower fragmentation (β = -0.073; 95% CI: -0.128, -0.018) were associated with more internalising problems. We also observed positive between-person associations between PM, noise, and internalising problems, but both associations were unstable due to the high PM-noise correlation. Further, we observed a non-linear between-person PM-externalising problems association turning positive when PM > 15 µg/m. Null associations were found for green space.
Our findings suggested that air pollution, noise, and neighbourhood deprivation are risk factors for adolescent mental health. Not only exposure levels but also exposure changes matter for adolescent mental health.
横断面研究发现,邻里环境与青少年心理健康之间存在关联,但为数不多的纵向研究主要侧重于基于单一暴露因素的分析,很少评估环境变化与心理健康之间的关联。
我们评估了多个邻里时间变化的物理和社会环境暴露与整个青春期外化和内化问题的个体内和个体间的纵向关联。
我们使用荷兰 TRACES(追踪青少年个体生活调查)研究的四个时间点(11 岁、13 岁、16 岁和 19 岁)的自我报告的外化和内化问题的数据,共有 2135 名青少年参与。我们测量了基于居住地的时间变化的环境暴露,包括绿色空间、空气污染(细颗粒物(PM))、噪声、贫困和社会分裂。我们使用随机效应个体间回归模型来评估环境与心理健康的关联。
在个体内水平上,PM 每增加一个四分位间距(IQR),与外化问题增加 0.056 IQR(95%CI:0.014,0.099)相关,而社会分裂每增加一个 IQR,与外化问题减少 0.010 IQR(95%CI:-0.020,-0.001)相关。分层分析显示,PM 与移居者的关联具有显著性,而社会分裂的关联仅存在于非移居者中。在个体间水平上,噪声每增加一个 IQR,与外化问题增加 0.100 IQR(95%CI:0.031,0.169)相关,而较高的贫困(β=0.080;95%CI:0.022,0.138)和较低的分裂(β=-0.073;95%CI:-0.128,-0.018)与内化问题增加相关。我们还观察到 PM、噪声与内化问题之间存在正的个体间关联,但由于 PM 与噪声之间的高度相关性,这两个关联都不稳定。此外,我们观察到当 PM>15µg/m 时,PM 与外化问题之间的个体间关联由负转正。绿色空间没有发现关联。
我们的研究结果表明,空气污染、噪声和邻里贫困是青少年心理健康的风险因素。不仅暴露水平,而且暴露变化也对青少年心理健康有影响。