Mizen Amy, Thompson Daniel A, Watkins Alan, Akbari Ashley, Garrett Joanne K, Geary Rebecca, Lovell Rebecca, Lyons Ronan A, Nieuwenhuijsen Mark, Parker Sarah C, Rowney Francis M, Song Jiao, Stratton Gareth, Wheeler Benedict W, White James, White Mathew P, Williams Sue, Rodgers Sarah E, Fry Richard
Swansea University Medical School, Swansea University, Swansea, UK.
European Centre for Environment and Human Health, University of Exeter Medical School, University of Exeter, Truro, UK.
J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol. 2024 Sep;34(5):753-760. doi: 10.1038/s41370-024-00650-5. Epub 2024 Feb 29.
Exposure to green space can protect against poor health through a variety of mechanisms. However, there is heterogeneity in methodological approaches to exposure assessments which makes creating effective policy recommendations challenging.
Critically evaluate the use of a satellite-derived exposure metric, the Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI), for assessing access to different types of green space in epidemiological studies.
We used Landsat 5-8 (30 m resolution) to calculate average EVI for a 300 m radius surrounding 1.4 million households in Wales, UK for 2018. We calculated two additional measures using topographic vector data to represent access to green spaces within 300 m of household locations. The two topographic vector-based measures were total green space area stratified by type and average private garden size. We used linear regression models to test whether EVI could discriminate between publicly accessible and private green space and Pearson correlation to test associations between EVI and green space types.
Mean EVI for a 300 m radius surrounding households in Wales was 0.28 (IQR = 0.12). Total green space area and average private garden size were significantly positively associated with corresponding EVI measures (β = < 0.0001, 95% CI: 0.0000, 0.0000; β = 0.0001, 95% CI: 0.0001, 0.0001 respectively). In urban areas, as average garden size increases by 1 m, EVI increases by 0.0002. Therefore, in urban areas, to see a 0.1 unit increase in EVI index score, garden size would need to increase by 500 m. The very small β values represent no 'measurable real-world' associations. When stratified by type, we observed no strong associations between greenspace and EVI.
It is a widely implemented assumption in epidiological studies that an increase in EVI is equivalent to an increase in greenness and/or green space. We used linear regression models to test associations between EVI and potential sources of green reflectance at a neighbourhood level using satellite imagery from 2018. We compared EVI measures with a 'gold standard' vector-based dataset that defines publicly accessible and private green spaces. We found that EVI should be interpreted with care as a greater EVI score does not necessarily mean greater access to publicly available green spaces in the hyperlocal environment.
接触绿地可通过多种机制预防健康问题。然而,暴露评估的方法存在异质性,这使得制定有效的政策建议具有挑战性。
批判性地评估利用卫星衍生的暴露指标——增强植被指数(EVI),在流行病学研究中评估不同类型绿地可达性的应用。
我们使用陆地卫星5 - 8(30米分辨率)计算了2018年英国威尔士140万户家庭周围半径300米范围内的平均EVI。我们使用地形矢量数据计算了另外两项指标,以表示家庭位置300米范围内的绿地可达性。基于地形矢量的两项指标分别是按类型分层的绿地总面积和私人花园平均面积。我们使用线性回归模型来检验EVI能否区分公共可达绿地和私人绿地,并使用皮尔逊相关性来检验EVI与绿地类型之间的关联。
威尔士家庭周围半径300米范围内的平均EVI为0.28(四分位距 = 0.12)。绿地总面积和私人花园平均面积与相应的EVI指标显著正相关(β = < 0.0001,95%置信区间:0.0000,0.0000;β = 0.0001,95%置信区间:0.0001,0.0001)。在城市地区,随着花园平均面积每增加1平方米,EVI增加0.0002。因此在城市地区,要使EVI指数得分增加0.1个单位,花园面积需要增加500平方米。非常小的β值表示没有“可测量的现实世界”关联。按类型分层时,我们未观察到绿地与EVI之间有强关联。
在流行病学研究中,一个广泛采用的假设是EVI的增加等同于绿色度和/或绿地增加。我们使用线性回归模型,利用2018年的卫星图像,在社区层面检验EVI与绿色反射潜在来源之间 的关联。我们将EVI指标与一个基于矢量的“金标准”数据集进行比较,该数据集定义了公共可达绿地和私人绿地。我们发现,EVI的解释应谨慎,因为更高的EVI得分并不一定意味着在超本地环境中更容易获得公共绿地。