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3. Greening: Generally aesthetic-based interventions including greening of vacant
lots (typically involving removing rubbish, planting trees) and providing street
trees.
4. Green infrastructure: For environmental purposes such as storm water manage-
ment or cooling urban/suburban areas, representing benefits related to the eco-
system service approach (provisioning and regulation of environmental goods
and services).
These four categories, while not considered to be exhaustive or absolute, broadly
represent the majority of green space interventions currently being applied in urban
settings.
The methodologies for undertaking the evidence and case-study reviews are
detailed elsewhere (WHO Regional Office for Europe 2017). Briefly, the evidence
review searched eight electronic databases (Medline, PsycINFO, Web of Science
(Science and Social Science Citation Indices), PADDI (Planning Architecture
Design Database Ireland), Zetoc, Scopus, Greenfiles, SIGLE (System for
Information on Grey Literature in Europe)). Studies were included if they: (i) evalu-
ated an urban green space intervention; and (ii) measured health, well-being, social
or environmental outcome(s). Interventions involving any age group were included.
Interventions must have involved: (i) physical change to green space in an urban-
context including improvements to existing urban green space or development of
new urban green space, or (ii) a combination of physical change to urban green
space supplemented by a specific urban green space awareness, marketing or pro-
motion programme to encourage use of urban green space. The case studies were
submitted to the WHO in response to a call on urban green space interventions. An
online survey questionnaire was used to gather data on characteristics of green
space, type of intervention, project objectives and outcomes, impacts of the inter-
ventions, and lessons learned.
A summary of the evidence base for each intervention category and equity
impacts, and case study examples illustrating intervention approaches are provided
below.
17.2.2 Park-Based Interventions
There was strong evidence to support the use of park-based interventions that spe-
cifically combined a physical change to green space and promotion/marketing pro-
grammes, particularly for increasing park use and encouraging physical activity
(7/7 studies showing a significant intervention effect) (see Table
17.1). A number of
the studies in the review included control groups. Control groups allow researchers
to assess whether the findings from the intervention tested are due solely to the
intervention and help rule out alternate explanations. Typically control groups
included green space sites that did not undergo any intervention (e.g. no change to
the physical environment, and no new marketing events) during the study period,
R. F. Hunter et al.
Biodiversity and Health in the Face of Climate Change
- Titel
- Biodiversity and Health in the Face of Climate Change
- Autoren
- Melissa Marselle
- Jutta Stadler
- Horst Korn
- Katherine Irvine
- Aletta Bonn
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-030-02318-8
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 508
- Schlagwörter
- Environment, Environmental health, Applied ecology, Climate change, Biodiversity, Public health, Regional planning, Urban planning
- Kategorien
- Naturwissenschaften Umwelt und Klima