Busca avançada
Ano de início
Entree


Balanced spatial distribution of green areas creates healthier urban landscapes

Texto completo
Autor(es):
Cirino, Douglas William ; Tambosi, Leandro Reverberi ; Mauad, Thais ; de Freitas, Simone Rodrigues ; Metzger, Jean Paul
Número total de Autores: 5
Tipo de documento: Artigo Científico
Fonte: JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY; v. 59, n. 7, p. 13-pg., 2022-05-17.
Resumo

The benefits of green infrastructure on human well-being in urban areas are already well-established, with strong evidence of the positive effects of the amount and proximity to green areas. However, the understanding of how the spatial distribution and type of green areas affect health is still an open question. Here, through a land sharing and sparing framework, we explore how different spatial configurations of green and built-up areas and how different types of green areas can affect cardiovascular and respiratory hospitalizations in Sao Paulo city, Brazil. Sharing/sparing indicators were selected as the main explanatory factors in the control of all groups of diseases. Land sharing appeared as a favourable spatial condition to prevent cardiovascular hospitalization, while land sparing and arboreal vegetation were relevant to reduce hospitalization by lower respiratory diseases. For upper respiratory diseases, forests seem to provide a disservice, once they were associated with increased rates of hospitalization by respiratory allergies causes. Considering that hospitalization rates and severity of cardiovascular diseases are substantially higher than those of upper respiratory ones, dense vegetation tends to provide more services than disservices. The land sharing configuration, which is characterized by green areas spread throughout the urban network (in streets, gardens, small squares or parks), should lead to higher exposure and use of the benefits of green areas, which may then explain the greater prevention of cardiovascular diseases. These novel results indicate that a more balanced distribution of green areas across built-up areas creates healthier urban spaces, and thus can be used as an urban planning strategy to leverage the health benefits provided by green infrastructure. Policy implications. Aiming to reduce hospitalizations by cardiovascular and pulmonary causes, urban planning should promote the spreading of green areas across the cities, in order to increase daily contact with natural attributes, giving preference to distribution over total quantity of green in urban landscape. (AU)

Processo FAPESP: 20/06694-8 - BIOTA SÍNTESE - Núcleo de Análise e Síntese de Soluções Baseadas na Natureza
Beneficiário:Jean Paul Walter Metzger
Modalidade de apoio: Auxílio à Pesquisa - Programa BIOTA - Núcleos de Pesquisa Orientada a Problemas em São Paulo
Processo FAPESP: 20/15785-7 - Relacionando a provisão de serviços ecossistêmicos culturais com a saúde humana em paisagens urbanas
Beneficiário:Douglas William Cirino
Modalidade de apoio: Bolsas no Brasil - Doutorado
Processo FAPESP: 13/23457-6 - Projeto interface: relações entre estrutura da paisagem, processos ecológicos, biodiversidade e serviços ecossistêmicos
Beneficiário:Jean Paul Walter Metzger
Modalidade de apoio: Auxílio à Pesquisa - Programa BIOTA - Temático