At the population level, residential green space has long been
linked to a lower risk of death from heart disease and respiratory
problems, as well as a lower risk of hospitalization for events like
heart attacks and strokes, researchers note in the Journal of the
American Heart Association. But there isn't as much evidence showing
whether this connection holds true for individuals.
For the current study, researchers tested for a variety of
biomarkers of stress and heart disease risk in blood and urine
samples from 408 patients at a cardiology clinic in Louisville,
Kentucky. They also used satellite data from the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the United States
Geological Survey (USGS) to estimate the extent of greenery where
each person lived.
Compared to people in areas with the least amount of green space,
residents of the greenest neighborhoods had lower urinary levels of
the hormone epinephrine, indicating lower stress levels, the study
found. They also had lower urinary levels a marker of oxidative
stress known as F2-isoprostane.
In addition, people in greener areas had a higher capacity to
maintain healthy blood vessels than residents of places without much
green space.
"Both the magnitude of the effect and the pervasiveness of the
influence of greenery on health are surprising," said senior study
author Aruni Bhatnagar of the University of Louisville.
"If the results of this study bear out, it would mean that frequent
interactions with nature may be one way of decreasing risk of heart
disease," Bhatnagar said by email.
Participants in the study were 51 years old on average, most were
overweight, and many had high blood pressure or high cholesterol.
The majority lived in areas with limited green space.
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Beyond its small size, the study also wasn't a controlled experiment
designed to prove whether or how green space might directly reduce
stress or improve heart or blood vessel health.
However, the connection between residential greenery and a lower
levels of certain markers of heart problems held up even after
researchers accounted for other factors that can independently
influence the risk of heart disease like age, sex, ethnicity,
smoking status, patients' use of statins to control cholesterol,
neighborhood poverty and proximity to pollution from traffic fumes.
"While it is true that in most U.S. cities, those of higher
socioeconomic status live in greener areas, in our study, we
statistically adjusted for income and education within that
neighborhood, so it seems that the effect of greenness is
independent of socioeconomic status," Bhatnagar said.
It's possible that green space might encourage more physical
activity, and a higher density of trees and shrubs may also improve
air quality by reducing levels of some pollutants, said Annemarie
Hirsch, an environmental health researcher at Geisinger in Danville,
Pennsylvania, who wasn't involved in the study.
"Green spaces can also increase the sense of social cohesion, a
factor that has been associated with health and wellbeing, by
facilitating interaction with neighbors," Hirsch said by email.
More greenery might also make it easier for people to be in a better
mood.
"Green space may also provide a barrier to stressful environmental
features, including traffic noise and displeasing structures,"
Hirsch said. "At the same time, green space has been described as
restorative, blocking negative thoughts and feelings and thus
reducing stress."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2QN7Z5S Journal of the American Heart
Association, online December 5, 2018.
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