TY - JOUR
T1 - Greenness and allergies
T2 - Evidence of differential associations in two areas in Germany
AU - Fuertes, Elaine
AU - Markevych, Iana
AU - von Berg, Andrea
AU - Bauer, Carl Peter
AU - Berdel, Dietrich
AU - Koletzko, Sibylle
AU - Sugiri, Dorothea
AU - Heinrich, Joachim
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Background: Positive greenness effects on health are increasingly reported, although studies on allergic outcomes remain limited and conicting. We examined whether residential greenness is associated with childhood doctor diagnosed allergic rhinitis, eyes and nose symptoms and aeroallergen sensitisation using two combined birth cohorts (GINIplus and LISAplus) followed from birth to 10 years in northern and southern Germany (Ntotal=5803). Methods: Mean residential greenness in a 500 m buffer around the 10-year home addresses was dened using the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index, a green biomass density indicator. Longitudinal associations were assessed per study area (GINI/LISA South and GINI/LISA North) using generalised estimation equations adjusted for host and environmental covariates. Results: Despite identical study designs and statistical modelling, greenness effects differed across the two study areas. Associations were elevated for allergic rhinitis and eyes and nose symptoms in the urban GINI/LISA South area. In contrast, risk estimates were signicantly below one for these outcomes and aeroallergen sensitisation in rural GINI/LISA North. Area-specic associations were similar across buffer sizes and addresses (birth and 6 years) and remained heterogeneous after air pollution and population density stratication. Conclusions: Existing and future single-area studies on greenness and green spaces Referencesshould be interpreted with caution.
AB - Background: Positive greenness effects on health are increasingly reported, although studies on allergic outcomes remain limited and conicting. We examined whether residential greenness is associated with childhood doctor diagnosed allergic rhinitis, eyes and nose symptoms and aeroallergen sensitisation using two combined birth cohorts (GINIplus and LISAplus) followed from birth to 10 years in northern and southern Germany (Ntotal=5803). Methods: Mean residential greenness in a 500 m buffer around the 10-year home addresses was dened using the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index, a green biomass density indicator. Longitudinal associations were assessed per study area (GINI/LISA South and GINI/LISA North) using generalised estimation equations adjusted for host and environmental covariates. Results: Despite identical study designs and statistical modelling, greenness effects differed across the two study areas. Associations were elevated for allergic rhinitis and eyes and nose symptoms in the urban GINI/LISA South area. In contrast, risk estimates were signicantly below one for these outcomes and aeroallergen sensitisation in rural GINI/LISA North. Area-specic associations were similar across buffer sizes and addresses (birth and 6 years) and remained heterogeneous after air pollution and population density stratication. Conclusions: Existing and future single-area studies on greenness and green spaces Referencesshould be interpreted with caution.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84904351127&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1136/jech-2014-203903
DO - 10.1136/jech-2014-203903
M3 - Article
C2 - 24862831
AN - SCOPUS:84904351127
SN - 0143-005X
VL - 68
SP - 787
EP - 790
JO - Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
JF - Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
IS - 8
ER -