Prenatal exposure to green space and mental health in early adolescence: findings from the TRAILS study.

Am J Epidemiol

Department of Human Geography and Spatial Planning, Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examined the impact of prenatal green space exposure on mental health in adolescents, using data from a Dutch cohort of 1,476 individuals and assessing outcomes like externalizing/internalizing problems, tobacco, and alcohol use.
  • - Results indicated that more prenatal green space was linked to higher externalizing problems; however, this association weakened when considering factors like urban living, and changes in green space during childhood showed a more positive impact on mental health.
  • - Overall, the findings suggest that prenatal green space exposure does not benefit adolescent mental health, but rather, increased green space during childhood may help reduce externalizing issues in early adolescence.

Article Abstract

Little is known about whether prenatal green space exposure contributes to mental health later in life. Using data from a Dutch cohort (TRAILS; n=1,476), we assessed associations between prenatal (1989-1991) green space exposure and four mental health outcomes, namely externalizing problems, internalizing problems, tobacco use, and alcohol use, self-reported at eleven-year-old (2001-2002), and mediation of gestational age and birthweight on these associations. In a structural equational model, adolescents with one standard deviation (SD) unit more prenatal green space exposure showed a 0.119 SD (95%CI:0.028,0.210) more externalizing problems in early adolescence. There are two potential explanations for this unexpected positive association. First, controlling for urbanicity attenuated this association to become insignificant, but the degree of attenuation was minor [0.096, (95%CI:-0.003,0.195)]. Second, this unexpected association might be a consequence of changes in green space exposure in the intervening years, namely childhood (from birth to early adolescence), indicating that individuals with increased green space exposure over childhood exhibited fewer externalizing problems in early adolescence. For the prenatal green space-externalizing problems association, we did not observe mediation by gestational age or birthweight. Overall, these findings suggest no beneficial role of prenatal green space on adolescent mental health. Instead, increased green space exposure in childhood may lead to lower externalizing problems in early adolescence.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwae373DOI Listing

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