Thompson Rachel L, Wyka Katarzyna E, Evenson Kelly R, Thorpe Lorna E, Johnson Glen D, Pavilonis Brian T, Huang Terry T-K
Center for Systems and Community Design, Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, City University of New York (CUNY), 55 West 125th Street, New York, NY, 10027, USA.
NYU-CUNY Prevention Research Center, New York, NY, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2025 Jul 19;25(1):2515. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-23639-7.
Quality parks have the potential to promote well-being and health equity in urban communities through reduced stress, yet high-quality epidemiological evidence is limited. This quasi-experimental study measured associations between park renovation and changes in perceived stress among low-income adults in New York City.
Pre- and post-renovation data on the Perceived Stress Scale and park use from 162 adults living near (< 0.3 miles) 31 renovated parks and 151 adults living near 21 sociodemographically matched control parks were analyzed. Linear mixed-effects difference-in-difference (DID) regression measured the association between park renovation and change in perceived stress (post-pre) in the overall sample and stratified by baseline sociodemographics. Additional models explored the interaction of post-renovation park use frequency [high (≥ once/week), low (< once/week)] and intervention status on changes in perceived stress.
Overall, changes in perceived stress were similar between intervention and control groups [DID = 0.28 (95% CI -1.48, 2.03)]. However, park renovation was associated with a significant decrease in perceived stress among divorced/separated/widowed participants [DID = -4.22 (95% CI -7.92, -0.53)] and middle-aged participants (35-49y) with high park use [DID = -4.46 (95% CI -8.28, -0.64)]. Among intervention but not control participants, those with high park use experienced a significantly larger decrease in perceived stress compared to those with low park use [DID = -2.92 (95% CI -5.36, -0.47)].
In one of the first and largest studies on park quality improvement and mental health, park renovation near one's home was associated with decreased perceived stress among divorced/separated/widowed adults and middle-aged frequent park users. Frequent users of renovated parks experienced a larger drop in perceived stress than infrequent users, suggesting that high-quality parks may be an important pre-condition to the benefits of frequent park use on stress reduction.
优质公园有潜力通过减轻压力来促进城市社区的幸福感和健康公平,但高质量的流行病学证据有限。这项准实验研究测量了纽约市低收入成年人中公园翻新与感知压力变化之间的关联。
分析了162名居住在31个翻新公园附近(<0.3英里)的成年人以及151名居住在21个社会人口统计学匹配的对照公园附近的成年人在翻新前后的感知压力量表数据和公园使用情况。线性混合效应差分回归测量了公园翻新与总体样本中感知压力变化(后 - 前)之间的关联,并按基线社会人口统计学进行分层。其他模型探讨了翻新后公园使用频率[高(≥每周一次),低(<每周一次)]与干预状态对感知压力变化的相互作用。
总体而言,干预组和对照组之间的感知压力变化相似[差分 = 0.28(95%置信区间 -1.48,2.03)]。然而,公园翻新与离婚/分居/丧偶参与者[差分 = -4.22(95%置信区间 -7.92,-0.53)]以及公园使用频率高的中年参与者(35 - 49岁)[差分 = -4.46(95%置信区间 -8.28,-0.64)]的感知压力显著降低有关。在干预组而非对照组参与者中,公园使用频率高的人比使用频率低的人感知压力下降幅度更大[差分 = -2.92(95%置信区间 -5.36,-0.47)]。
在关于公园质量改善与心理健康的首批大型研究之一中,住所附近的公园翻新与离婚/分居/丧偶成年人以及中年频繁使用公园者的感知压力降低有关。翻新公园的频繁使用者比不频繁使用者的感知压力下降幅度更大,这表明优质公园可能是频繁使用公园对减轻压力有益的重要前提条件。