Examining the effectiveness of place-based interventions to improve public health and reduce health inequalities: an umbrella review.

BMC Public Health

Population Health Sciences Institute, Newcastle University, 5th Floor, Ridley 1, Newcastle Upon Tyne, NE1 7RU, UK.

Published: October 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Locally delivered public health interventions show potential for improving health and reducing inequalities, but evidence on their effectiveness is limited.
  • Methodology involved a systematic review of relevant studies published from 2008 to 2020, focusing on the health impacts of interventions in physical, social, and economic environments in high-income countries.
  • Thirteen systematic reviews were analyzed, highlighting mostly physical environment changes (like parks and transport) positively affecting health, but the impact on health inequalities is still unclear due to lack of data.

Article Abstract

Background: Locally delivered, place-based public health interventions are receiving increasing attention as a way of improving health and reducing inequalities. However, there is limited evidence on their effectiveness. This umbrella review synthesises systematic review evidence of the health and health inequalities impacts of locally delivered place-based interventions across three elements of place and health: the physical, social, and economic environments.

Methods: Systematic review methodology was used to identify recent published systematic reviews of the effectiveness of place-based interventions on health and health inequalities (PROGRESS+) in high-income countries. Nine databases were searched from 1st January 2008 to 1st March 2020. The quality of the included articles was determined using the Revised Assessment of Multiple Systematic Reviews tool (R-AMSTAR).

Results: Thirteen systematic reviews were identified - reporting 51 unique primary studies. Fifty of these studies reported on interventions that changed the physical environment and one reported on changes to the economic environment. Only one primary study reported cost-effectiveness data. No reviews were identified that assessed the impact of social interventions. Given heterogeneity and quality issues, we found tentative evidence that the provision of housing/home modifications, improving the public realm, parks and playgrounds, supermarkets, transport, cycle lanes, walking routes, and outdoor gyms - can all have positive impacts on health outcomes - particularly physical activity. However, as no studies reported an assessment of variation in PROGRESS+ factors, the effect of these interventions on health inequalities remains unclear.

Conclusions: Place-based interventions can be effective at improving physical health, health behaviours and social determinants of health outcomes. High agentic interventions indicate greater improvements for those living in greater proximity to the intervention, which may suggest that in order for interventions to reduce inequalities, they should be implemented at a scale commensurate with the level of disadvantage. Future research needs to ensure equity data is collected, as this is severely lacking and impeding progress on identifying interventions that are effective in reducing health inequalities.

Trial Registration: PROSPERO CRD42019158309.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8524206PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11852-zDOI Listing

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