Villeneuve Paul J, Cottagiri Susanna Abraham, Jiang Ying, De Groh Margaret, Fuller-Thomson Esme
Department of Neuroscience, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Public Health Sciences, Queen's University, 62 Fifth Field Company Lane, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2025 Aug 20;20(8):e0329141. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0329141. eCollection 2025.
Urban greenness has several demonstrated mental health benefits, including lower rates of depression and loneliness. Few studies have evaluated the possible benefits of greenness on depression during the COVID-19 worldwide pandemic. We investigated this topic using a prospective cohort of Canadian adults.
Our study population consisted of 13,130 participants, 50 years of age and older, of the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging. The Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Short Scale (CES-D-10) screening tool was used to determine whether individuals had depression at two-time points (pre-pandemic, and 6 months into the pandemic). Greenness was characterized using the maximum annual mean Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) (500m buffer) from the pre-pandemic residential address. Logistic regression was used to estimate the odds of depression during the pandemic in relation to an interquartile range increase in the NDVI.
The prevalence of depression increased nearly twofold between the pre-pandemic and pandemic surveys (8.5% to 16.5% for men; 14.4% to 27.1% for women). Irrespective of depression status before the pandemic, those with higher residential greenness had lower odds of depression during the pandemic. Among those 'not depressed' pre-pandemic, the odds ratio (OR) of depression during the pandemic in relation to an interquartile increase in the NDVI (0.06) was 0.91 (95% CI: 0.85-0.97), while a weaker association was found for those depressed pre-pandemic (OR=0.96; 95% CI: 0.83-1.11). The inverse association between greenness and depression during the pandemic was strongest among those of lower socioeconomic status.
Our findings suggest that green spaces in urban areas helped mitigate against depression during the pandemic.
城市绿化已被证明对心理健康有诸多益处,包括降低抑郁和孤独发生率。很少有研究评估在新冠疫情全球大流行期间绿化对抑郁的潜在益处。我们使用加拿大成年人的前瞻性队列对此主题进行了调查。
我们的研究人群包括13130名年龄在50岁及以上的加拿大衰老纵向研究参与者。使用流行病学研究中心抑郁短量表(CES-D-10)筛查工具来确定个体在两个时间点(疫情前和疫情开始6个月后)是否患有抑郁症。利用疫情前居住地址的年最大平均归一化植被指数(NDVI)(500米缓冲区)来表征绿化程度。采用逻辑回归来估计疫情期间抑郁几率与NDVI四分位间距增加之间的关系。
在疫情前和疫情期间的调查中,抑郁症患病率几乎增加了一倍(男性从8.5%增至16.5%;女性从14.4%增至27.1%)。无论疫情前的抑郁状况如何,居住绿化程度较高的人在疫情期间患抑郁症的几率较低。在疫情前“未患抑郁症”的人群中,疫情期间抑郁几率与NDVI四分位间距增加(0.06)相关的比值比(OR)为0.91(95%置信区间:0.85 - 0.97),而在疫情前患抑郁症的人群中发现的关联较弱(OR = 0.96;95%置信区间:0.83 - 1.11)。疫情期间绿化与抑郁之间的负相关在社会经济地位较低的人群中最为明显。
我们的研究结果表明,城市绿地有助于在疫情期间减轻抑郁。