Relationship between neighbourhood socioeconomic position and neighbourhood public green space availability: An environmental inequality analysis in a large German city applying generalized linear models.

Int J Hyg Environ Health

University of Bremen, Institute for Public Health and Nursing Research, Department of Social Epidemiology, Germany; Health Sciences Bremen, University of Bremen, Germany. Electronic address:

Published: June 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the relationship between neighborhood socioeconomic position (SEP) and the availability of public green spaces in a large German city, highlighting the uneven distribution of environmental resources.
  • Two measures of green space were used: one based on the percentage of green space within neighborhoods and another based on distances from neighborhood centroids, revealing that lower SEP correlates with less green space availability in both contexts.
  • The findings indicate that disparities in green space may exacerbate environmental health inequalities, emphasizing the need for identifying at-risk neighborhoods in urban planning and research.

Article Abstract

Background: The environmental justice framework states that besides environmental burdens also resources may be social unequally distributed both on the individual and on the neighbourhood level. This ecological study investigated whether neighbourhood socioeconomic position (SEP) was associated with neighbourhood public green space availability in a large German city with more than 1 million inhabitants.

Methods: Two different measures were defined for green space availability. Firstly, percentage of green space within neighbourhoods was calculated with the additional consideration of various buffers around the boundaries. Secondly, percentage of green space was calculated based on various radii around the neighbourhood centroid. An index of neighbourhood SEP was calculated with principal component analysis. Log-gamma regression from the group of generalized linear models was applied in order to consider the non-normal distribution of the response variable. All models were adjusted for population density.

Results: Low neighbourhood SEP was associated with decreasing neighbourhood green space availability including 200m up to 1000m buffers around the neighbourhood boundaries. Low neighbourhood SEP was also associated with decreasing green space availability based on catchment areas measured from neighbourhood centroids with different radii (1000m up to 3000 m). With an increasing radius the strength of the associations decreased.

Conclusions: Social unequally distributed green space may amplify environmental health inequalities in an urban context. Thus, the identification of vulnerable neighbourhoods and population groups plays an important role for epidemiological research and healthy city planning. As a methodical aspect, log-gamma regression offers an adequate parametric modelling strategy for positively distributed environmental variables.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheh.2017.02.006DOI Listing

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