Table 2.
Authors (Year) |
Study objective |
Design & sample | Study methods | Relevant findings |
---|---|---|---|---|
Chen et al. (2017) | Investigate whether living in areas high in greenness may help buffer effects of difficult family relationships for children with asthma | Cross‐sectional; 150 children age 9–17 years in Chicago who were diagnosed with asthma in 2013–2014 |
Hierarchical multiple regression to predict asthma measures from demographic covariates, main effects of greenness and family relationships (measured as maternal hostility), and interaction between greenness and family relationships |
No main effects of NDVI (250m) on asthma control [B = 0.05, 95% CI (−9, 17), p = .53] or functional limitations [B = 0.02, 95% CI (−4, 5), p = .84]. Interaction effect of greenness x parent hostility significant for asthma functional limitations [B= −0.14, 95% CI (−2, −0.05), p = .04] but not for asthma control [B = 0.03, 95% CI (−2, 3), p = .71] |
Cillufo et al. (2018) | Evaluate association between urban environmental exposures to greenness, grayness, and NO2 air pollution with respiratory and allergic symptoms |
Cross‐sectional; 219 schoolchildren age 8–10 in Palermo, Italy in April 2013. |
Respiratory symptoms per parent and child questionnaire; NDVI; Land cover use for greyness; NO2 concentration from land use regression model | Participants lived near each other, so little variation in NDVI. No statistically significant relationships between NDVI ≤ 0.15 (1st quartile) and pulmonary symptoms (breathlessness, wheeze) [aOR = 0.98 95% CI (0.79, 1.21)]. |
Donovan et al. (2018) |
Assess association between natural environment and asthma in children | Cohort; 49,956 children in New Zealand (1998–2016) | Used national database to assess outcomes, analyzed via three‐staged modeling approach (NDVI only, NDVI + # land cover types, NDVI + # and type of land cover) | 1 SD increase lowers asthma risk for mean lifetime NDVI [OR = 0.92, 95% CI (0.89, 0.95), p < .01) and mean lifetime # land cover types [OR = 0.93, 95% CI (0.89, 0.99), p < .05); nonnative species increased asthma risk. |
Eldeirawi et al. (2019) | Examine association between respiratory symptoms and residential surrounding greenness in urban children |
Cross‐sectional; 1,915 children of Mexican‐American heritage in urban Chicago, IL in 2004 |
Multi‐level, mixed‐effect multiple regression used to determine association between greenness and parent‐reported respiratory symptoms. | NDVI at all buffers associated with lower odds lifetime asthma for those exposed to smoke [100 m: aOR 0.43 (95% CI: 0.22–0.87); 250 m: aOR 0.39 (95% CI: 0.18–0.84); aOR 0.48 (95% CI: 0.26–0.9)]; median NDVI slightly higher for nonasthmatics at all buffers but not significant. |
Feng and Astell‐Burt (2017) | To investigate whether green space lowers child asthma risk by buffering effects of heavy traffic and a lack of neighborhood safety | Cross‐sectional; 4,447 children age 6–7 years old in Australia in 2006 | Cross‐tabulations used to pattern asthma cases with respect to green space quantity, and perception of heavy traffic and area safety | Living near high traffic and low greenness had higher risk of asthma (OR 1.87, 95% CI: 1.37–2.55); living in high traffic and high greenness had lower risk (OR 0.32, 95% CI: 0.12–0.84). |
Lambert et al. (2017) | Systematic review and meta‐analysis of residential greenness and allergic respiratory disease in children | Meta‐analysis of three studies |
Threshold of 3 studies with same outcome and exposure in same buffer; random effects used; heterogeneity set at < 80% |
No significant overall association (pooled OR 1.01, CI: 0.93–1.09; I2 68%, p = .02) |
Tischer et al. (2017) | Assess effect of three indices of urban built environment on allergic and respiratory conditions | Cohort; 2,472 children age 4 years from two distinct regions of Spain: Euro‐Siberian and Mediterranean | Longitudinal assessments at 1 year of age to assess asthma and bronchitis and 4 years of age to assess asthma, bronchitis, and allergic rhinitis | No significant relationships between greenness, proximity to green space, or greyness with any health outcome; Prevalence of asthma higher in Euro‐Siberian (rural) region (5%) than Mediterranean (urban; 2%); adjusted OR for asthma higher in 3rd tertile NDVI versus. 1st for cohort (aOR 1.82; CI: 0.71–4.67), Euro‐Siberian region (aOR 2.26; CI: 0.91–5.67), and Mediterranean region (aOR 2.05; CI: 0.69–6.06); proximity to green space protective for asthma but not significantly |
Abbreviations: NDVI, Normalized Difference Vegetation Index; NO2, Nitrogen dioxide.