Residential greenspace and COVID-19 Severity: A cohort study of 313,657 individuals in Greater Manchester, United Kingdom

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Residential greenspace and COVID-19 Severity : A cohort study of 313,657 individuals in Greater Manchester, United Kingdom. / Hyman, Samuel; Zhang, Jiawei; Lim, Youn-hee; Jovanovic Andersen, Zorana; Cole-hunter, Thomas; Li, Yujing; Møller, Peter; Daras, Konstantinos; Williams, Richard; Thomas, Matthew L; Labib, S. M.; Topping, David.

In: Environment International, Vol. 190, 108843, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hyman, S, Zhang, J, Lim, Y, Jovanovic Andersen, Z, Cole-hunter, T, Li, Y, Møller, P, Daras, K, Williams, R, Thomas, ML, Labib, SM & Topping, D 2024, 'Residential greenspace and COVID-19 Severity: A cohort study of 313,657 individuals in Greater Manchester, United Kingdom', Environment International, vol. 190, 108843. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2024.108843

APA

Hyman, S., Zhang, J., Lim, Y., Jovanovic Andersen, Z., Cole-hunter, T., Li, Y., Møller, P., Daras, K., Williams, R., Thomas, M. L., Labib, S. M., & Topping, D. (2024). Residential greenspace and COVID-19 Severity: A cohort study of 313,657 individuals in Greater Manchester, United Kingdom. Environment International, 190, [108843]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2024.108843

Vancouver

Hyman S, Zhang J, Lim Y, Jovanovic Andersen Z, Cole-hunter T, Li Y et al. Residential greenspace and COVID-19 Severity: A cohort study of 313,657 individuals in Greater Manchester, United Kingdom. Environment International. 2024;190. 108843. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2024.108843

Author

Hyman, Samuel ; Zhang, Jiawei ; Lim, Youn-hee ; Jovanovic Andersen, Zorana ; Cole-hunter, Thomas ; Li, Yujing ; Møller, Peter ; Daras, Konstantinos ; Williams, Richard ; Thomas, Matthew L ; Labib, S. M. ; Topping, David. / Residential greenspace and COVID-19 Severity : A cohort study of 313,657 individuals in Greater Manchester, United Kingdom. In: Environment International. 2024 ; Vol. 190.

Bibtex

@article{a91757b7343541e6bfc4117cf606ebbb,
title = "Residential greenspace and COVID-19 Severity: A cohort study of 313,657 individuals in Greater Manchester, United Kingdom",
abstract = "BackgroundGreenspaces contribute positively to mental and physical well-being, promote social cohesion, and alleviate environmental stressors, such as air pollution. Ecological studies suggest that greenspace may affect incidence and severity of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19).ObjectiveThis study examines the association between residential greenspace and COVID-19 related hospitalization and death.MethodIn this retrospective cohort based on patient records from the Greater Manchester Care Records, all first COVID-19 cases diagnosed between March 1, 2020, and May 31, 2022 were followed until COVID-19 related hospitalization or death within 28 days. Residential greenspace availability was assessed using the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index per lower super output area in Greater Manchester. The association of greenspace with COVID-19 hospitalization and mortality were estimated using multivariate logistic regression models after adjusting for potential individual, temporal, and spatial confounders. We explored potential effect modifications of the associations with greenspace and COVID-19 severity by age, sex, body mass index, smoking, deprivation, and certain comorbidities. Combined effects of greenspace and air pollution (NO2 and PM2.5) were investigated by mutually adjusting pairs with correlation coefficients ≤ 0·7.ResultsSignificant negative associations were observed between greenspace availability and COVID-19 hospitalization and mortality with odds ratios [OR] (95 % Confidence Intervals [CI]) of 0·96 (0·94-0·97) and 0·84 (0·80-0·88) (per interquartile range [IQR]), respectively. These were significantly modified by deprivation (P-value for interaction < 0.05), showing that those most deprived obtained largest benefits from greenspace. Inclusion of NO2 and PM2.5 diminished associations to null for COVID-19 hospitalization, but only reduced them slightly for mortality, where inverse associations remained.ConclusionIn the Greater Manchester area, residential greenspace is associated with reduced risk of hospitalization or death in individuals with COVID-19, with deprived groups obtaining the greatest benefits. Associations were strongest for COVID-19 mortality, which were robust to inclusion of air pollutants in the models.",
author = "Samuel Hyman and Jiawei Zhang and Youn-hee Lim and {Jovanovic Andersen}, Zorana and Thomas Cole-hunter and Yujing Li and Peter M{\o}ller and Konstantinos Daras and Richard Williams and Thomas, {Matthew L} and Labib, {S. M.} and David Topping",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1016/j.envint.2024.108843",
language = "English",
volume = "190",
journal = "Environment international",
issn = "0160-4120",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Residential greenspace and COVID-19 Severity

T2 - A cohort study of 313,657 individuals in Greater Manchester, United Kingdom

AU - Hyman, Samuel

AU - Zhang, Jiawei

AU - Lim, Youn-hee

AU - Jovanovic Andersen, Zorana

AU - Cole-hunter, Thomas

AU - Li, Yujing

AU - Møller, Peter

AU - Daras, Konstantinos

AU - Williams, Richard

AU - Thomas, Matthew L

AU - Labib, S. M.

AU - Topping, David

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - BackgroundGreenspaces contribute positively to mental and physical well-being, promote social cohesion, and alleviate environmental stressors, such as air pollution. Ecological studies suggest that greenspace may affect incidence and severity of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19).ObjectiveThis study examines the association between residential greenspace and COVID-19 related hospitalization and death.MethodIn this retrospective cohort based on patient records from the Greater Manchester Care Records, all first COVID-19 cases diagnosed between March 1, 2020, and May 31, 2022 were followed until COVID-19 related hospitalization or death within 28 days. Residential greenspace availability was assessed using the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index per lower super output area in Greater Manchester. The association of greenspace with COVID-19 hospitalization and mortality were estimated using multivariate logistic regression models after adjusting for potential individual, temporal, and spatial confounders. We explored potential effect modifications of the associations with greenspace and COVID-19 severity by age, sex, body mass index, smoking, deprivation, and certain comorbidities. Combined effects of greenspace and air pollution (NO2 and PM2.5) were investigated by mutually adjusting pairs with correlation coefficients ≤ 0·7.ResultsSignificant negative associations were observed between greenspace availability and COVID-19 hospitalization and mortality with odds ratios [OR] (95 % Confidence Intervals [CI]) of 0·96 (0·94-0·97) and 0·84 (0·80-0·88) (per interquartile range [IQR]), respectively. These were significantly modified by deprivation (P-value for interaction < 0.05), showing that those most deprived obtained largest benefits from greenspace. Inclusion of NO2 and PM2.5 diminished associations to null for COVID-19 hospitalization, but only reduced them slightly for mortality, where inverse associations remained.ConclusionIn the Greater Manchester area, residential greenspace is associated with reduced risk of hospitalization or death in individuals with COVID-19, with deprived groups obtaining the greatest benefits. Associations were strongest for COVID-19 mortality, which were robust to inclusion of air pollutants in the models.

AB - BackgroundGreenspaces contribute positively to mental and physical well-being, promote social cohesion, and alleviate environmental stressors, such as air pollution. Ecological studies suggest that greenspace may affect incidence and severity of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19).ObjectiveThis study examines the association between residential greenspace and COVID-19 related hospitalization and death.MethodIn this retrospective cohort based on patient records from the Greater Manchester Care Records, all first COVID-19 cases diagnosed between March 1, 2020, and May 31, 2022 were followed until COVID-19 related hospitalization or death within 28 days. Residential greenspace availability was assessed using the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index per lower super output area in Greater Manchester. The association of greenspace with COVID-19 hospitalization and mortality were estimated using multivariate logistic regression models after adjusting for potential individual, temporal, and spatial confounders. We explored potential effect modifications of the associations with greenspace and COVID-19 severity by age, sex, body mass index, smoking, deprivation, and certain comorbidities. Combined effects of greenspace and air pollution (NO2 and PM2.5) were investigated by mutually adjusting pairs with correlation coefficients ≤ 0·7.ResultsSignificant negative associations were observed between greenspace availability and COVID-19 hospitalization and mortality with odds ratios [OR] (95 % Confidence Intervals [CI]) of 0·96 (0·94-0·97) and 0·84 (0·80-0·88) (per interquartile range [IQR]), respectively. These were significantly modified by deprivation (P-value for interaction < 0.05), showing that those most deprived obtained largest benefits from greenspace. Inclusion of NO2 and PM2.5 diminished associations to null for COVID-19 hospitalization, but only reduced them slightly for mortality, where inverse associations remained.ConclusionIn the Greater Manchester area, residential greenspace is associated with reduced risk of hospitalization or death in individuals with COVID-19, with deprived groups obtaining the greatest benefits. Associations were strongest for COVID-19 mortality, which were robust to inclusion of air pollutants in the models.

U2 - 10.1016/j.envint.2024.108843

DO - 10.1016/j.envint.2024.108843

M3 - Journal article

VL - 190

JO - Environment international

JF - Environment international

SN - 0160-4120

M1 - 108843

ER -

ID: 396010376