Commentary – Climate change, health and green space co-benefits
Health Promotion and Chronic Disease Prevention in Canada
Marianne Kingsley, MScAuthor reference 1; EcoHealth OntarioAuthor reference 2
https://doi.org/10.24095/hpcdp.39.4.04
Author references:
- Author reference 1
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Healthy Public Policy, Toronto Public Health, City of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
- Author reference 2
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EcoHealth Ontario, Ontario, Canada
Correspondence:
Marianne Kingsley, Health Policy Specialist, Healthy Public Policy, Toronto Public Health, City of Toronto, 277 Victoria St., 7th Floor, Toronto, ON M5B 1W2; Tel: 416-338-5150; Email: marianne.kingsley@toronto.ca
Abstract
We examined two of humanity's present-day challenges, climate change and chronic diseases, in relation to the co-benefits that green spaces provide to human health and the environment. The reduction of several chronic diseases and associated symptoms, including anxiety, obesity and cardiovascular disease, has been associated with the presence of and access to green space. Green spaces also contribute to a number of environmental health benefits and have been shown to reduce the likelihood of flooding, improve air quality and provide cooling and shade. These co-benefits address both the symptoms of several chronic diseases and associated risk factors along with the environmental and health impacts of climate change. This article explores how to maximize the co-benefits of green spaces through two examples of multi-sectoral collaborations. With these two examples, we have provided a model of collective collaboration that aims to address complex issues, such as climate change and chronic diseases, through the common intervention of green spaces.
Keywords: chronic disease, green space, climate change, ecohealth, public health, co-benefits
Highlights
- Major chronic diseases, such as cancer, heart disease and diabetes, cause 65% of all deaths in Canada each year.
- The impacts of climate change are being felt throughout the country, including increased occurrence of extreme heat, droughts and floods.
- Protecting, improving and increasing green spaces can help address both of these major issues.
- EcoHealth Ontario is an example of a multi-sectoral partnership that works together to achieve multiple public health, planning and conservation objectives.
Introduction
Globally and locally, humanity is facing two very serious issues that are impacting human health: chronic diseasesFootnote 1 and climate change.Footnote 2 Major chronic diseases, such as cancer, heart disease, and diabetes, cause 65% of all deaths in Canada each year.Footnote 1 The impacts of climate change are being felt throughout Canada, including an increased occurrence of extreme weather events, such as extreme heat, droughts, wildfires and floods.Footnote 2 The indirect impacts of climate change are also becoming evident by compounding public health issues and threatening gains in population health.Footnote 3Footnote 4 While these impacts affect everyone, vulnerable populations are disproportionately burdened.Footnote 5
Green spaces (Box 1) present a unique intervention that offers co-benefits to climate change mitigation, adaptation, and human health. The presence of and access to urban green spaces has been shown to reduce the rate and impact of chronic diseases.Footnote 6Footnote 7 At the same time, green spaces can also help mitigate and improve resilience to climate change and its impacts.Footnote 8
Box 1. The term green space refers to a diverse range of spaces
What is green space?
There are many types of green spaces, all of which can provide health and climate change mitigation and adaptation benefits. Green space describes what may be referred to as green infrastructure, natural spaces, open space, or engineered green spaces. There are diverse sizes, types and functions of green spaces, including:
- Public spaces such as parks, conservation areas, greenways, trails, urban and rural forests, street trees, community gardens, school grounds, shorelines and ravines; and
- Private and institutional spaces and infrastructure such as gardens, green roofs, green walls, cemeteries, golf courses, and other outdoor spaces.
As Box 2 shows, green spaces can promote physical activity, contribute to social interaction and cohesion, increase access to healthy food, and contribute to stress reduction and cognitive restoration.Footnote 6Footnote 7Footnote 8 Green spaces also improve air quality, create shade, reduce outdoor air temperatures, and decrease the likelihood of flooding.Footnote 9Footnote 10Footnote 11
Box 2. Co-benefits and modifiers of green space impacts on climate change and human health
Green space impact on health and environment
The presence of and access to green spaces have positive associations with factors related to the environment and human healthFootnote 6.
Green space associations with the environmentFootnote 9Footnote 10Footnote 11
- Air quality improvements
- Reduction in urban heat island, shade provision
- Flooding mitigation through storm water storage
- Noise reduction
- Provision of food
Green space associations with human health and wellbeingFootnote 6Footnote 7Footnote 8
When people have access to local, neighbourhood green spaces:
- Birth outcomes are improved
- Mortality from all causes is reduced
- Level of obesity is reduced
- Number of people with cardiovascular diseases is reduced
- Symptoms of mental illness, including depression and anxiety are improved
- Self-reported feelings of stress are reduced
- Social cohesion is improved
Factors that impact the benefits that green spaces provide
Green space characteristics
- Availability and accessibility, e.g. location, distance from residence, quantity, sizeFootnote 12Footnote 13
- Aesthetic, e.g. landscaping, quality perceptionFootnote 13
- Amenities/equipment, e.g. infrastructure, servicesFootnote 14
- Maintenance, e.g. regularity of maintenance, garbage removalFootnote 15
Green spaces that are near residences, accessible, and useable for a diversity of groups, and perceived as well maintained have been found to provide the greatest health impacts.Footnote 7
PopulationsFootnote 7
Vulnerable groups, including people living on low income, racialized groups, older adults, and children have been found to experience the most benefits from green space.Footnote 16 In particular, the health of children has been shown to be positively impacted when well-maintained parks with playgrounds are in close proximity to their residence.Footnote 17 The health of vulnerable groups has been shown to experience the benefits of green space even with fairly small increases in nearby green space density.Footnote 18
This article outlines current health challenges and climate change threats facing Canadians and how the co-benefits of green space provide a unique opportunity to help mitigate them. It also presents two collaborations, EcoHealth Ontario in Canada and Climate Change Parks in Scotland (United Kingdom), for tackling cross-cutting issues such as climate change, public health, and the environment by promoting green space as an effective and efficient climate change intervention.
Chronic disease and green space
There are four major chronic diseases and about twenty percent of Canadians live with at least one of them.Footnote 1 Cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and respiratory disease cause approximately 65% of all deaths in Canada.Footnote 1 Additionally, mental health disorders, including depression and anxiety, are the primary cause for workplace disability in Canada.Footnote 1 Moreover, 33% of direct health-care expenditures in Canada can be attributed to disorders of the circulatory and respiratory systems, musculoskeletal disorders and mental disorders alone.Footnote 19 There are several risk factors associated with a person’s risk of having a chronic disease, including level of physical activity, exposure to tobacco smoke and eating habits.Footnote 1 For example, 9 out of 10 Canadian children do not meet the recommended level of physical activity.Footnote 1 However, these risk factors are modifiable and the presence of, and access to, greenspace can potentially reduce some risk factors leading to chronic diseases.Footnote 7
There is a large body of evidence demonstrating the positive impacts of the presence of, and access to, green spaces on health.Footnote 7 Studies suggest that the health benefits of green spaces are realized through various pathways (Box 2). Green spaces have a number of positive impacts on the urban environment which helps human health, including reducing noise, providing shade and cooling and reducing both the likelihood of flooding and air pollution.Footnote 9Footnote 10Footnote 11 In addition, green spaces can support and facilitate health and well-being by enabling stress alleviation and relaxation, physical activity, improved social interaction, and community cohesiveness.Footnote 6Footnote 7Footnote 8 Health benefits associated with the presence of, and access to, greenspace include improved levels of mental health, physical fitness, cognitive and immune function, as well as lower mortality rates.Footnote 12Footnote 13
The health benefits of green space are particularly substantial in populations that experience health inequities.Footnote 16 For example, a study conducted in England found that for all-cause and circulatory disease mortality, income-related inequalities between the lowest and highest income deprivation groups were lower among those living in the most green areas compared to the least green areas.Footnote 16
A similar finding was described in a Toronto study, which looked at tree density and self-reported health and cardio-metabolic conditions. It was found that the presence of trees could significantly improve health perception, comparable to living in a neighborhood with $10 000 higher median income or being 7 years younger.Footnote 20
Green space can increase resilience to climate change
As Boxes 2 and 3 show, the presence of green spaces helps mitigate climate change and improve human health by reducing chronic disease risk factors. But green space also provides the co-benefits of improving resiliency and recovery from the impacts of climate change (Box 3).Footnote 21Footnote 22
Box 3. Climate change impacts on human health and the accompanying green space co-benefit
Health impacts from climate change | Green space co-benefit/mitigation |
---|---|
Illness and premature death from exposure to extreme heatFootnote 2Footnote 5 |
|
Illness, stress and premature death from exposure to floodingFootnote 2Footnote 10 |
|
Mental stress from the impacts of extreme weatherFootnote 2 |
|
Food insecurityFootnote 5 |
|
Cardiovascular and respiratory illness due to degraded air qualityFootnote 3 |
|
An example of how the presence of, and access to, green space provides co-benefits is flooding. Flooding related to climate change is increasing and the presence of green spaces can reduce the likelihood of damage due to and extent of flooding. Green spaces such as parks, bio swales, rain gardens, engineered wetlands, and fields within the flood plain have the potential to temporarily store storm water and reduce run-off.Footnote 2 At the same time the presence of, and access to, green spaces has the potential to help reduce mental health symptoms, such as stress and anxiety,Footnote 6 which can be exacerbated by experiencing a flood.Footnote 23 The Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation estimated that “three years after their home was flooded 48 per cent of respondents from flooded households were worried when it rained, compared to three percent of respondents from non-flooded households.”Footnote 23
Putting green space evidence into practice through multi-sectoral collaborations
Protecting, promoting and increasing green spaces can be beneficial to human health through: 1) reducing certain chronic diseases and associated risk factors; 2) helping to mitigate climate change impacts; and 3) contributing to increased resiliency for recovering from climate change impacts.Footnote 9Footnote 10Footnote 11 These issues are being addressed by many different sectors, from public health officials, to urban planners, to conservationists. Protecting, promoting, and increasing green spaces then provides an intersection for a variety of sectors to come together, collaborate, and achieve greater action as a group. The umbrella of green spaces allows very different sectors to come together under one intervention and to maximize the co-benefits provided by green spaces. Two examples of these types of successful collaborations that promote green space are EcoHealth Ontario in Canada and Climate Change Parks in Scotland.
EcoHealth Ontario is a multi-sectoral, collaborative group that leverages mutually reinforcing activities under the vision that protecting, promoting, and increasing green spaces can be beneficial to human health. The collaboration has hosted several multi-sectoral workshops that allow planners, public health officials, conservationists, among others, to discuss methods, tools, and strategies that can help professionals put green space interventions into action. The collaboration also produces reports, toolkits, and education materials that focuses on promoting the ecological, health, and wellbeing benefits of greenspace, including climate change mitigation and adaptation and chronic disease reduction.
Another example of a multi-sectoral collaboration focusing on the co-benefits of green space is the pioneering ‘climate change parks’ being developed in Scotland. This initiative works by retrofitting existing urban green spaces to deliver climate change solutions.Footnote 24 It identifies how the various elements of a park can be modified to have a low carbon footprint and adapt to the weather impacts of climate change, such as providing flood management and shade, and to make the green spaces enjoyable in a variety of conditions.Footnote 24
Conclusion
Protecting, promoting, increasing, and improving green spaces is one intervention that provides several co-benefits to some of the major issues facing communities today. Focusing on green space provides a unique opportunity for groups to apply a single intervention with multiple benefits for multiple stakeholders. The benefits of green space provide an opportunity to both protect and promote these spaces, especially in urban centres.
It is imperative that governments, groups, organizations, and businesses work together towards a common goal, especially when addressing complex issues. Multi-sectoral collaboration is a valuable way to maximize the co-benefits provided by green space.
Working together to make green spaces a priority in communities and surrounding areas will help towards addressing the issues of chronic disease and climate change.
Conflicts of interest
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
Authors’ contributions and statement
MK contributed to the study concept and design and writing of the manuscript. EcoHealth Ontario members informed the concept and design and critically revised the manuscript and approved the version submitted for consideration.
The content and views expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Government of Canada.
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