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Age- and Sex-Specific Association Between Vegetation Cover and Mental Health Disorders: Bayesian Spatial Study

Age- and Sex-Specific Association Between Vegetation Cover and Mental Health Disorders: Bayesian Spatial Study

Social inequality (or marginalization) can also contribute to poor mental health outcomes in urban areas [13,21] and complicate our understanding of the relationship between reduced vegetation and mental health disorders. Along with vegetation loss, social inequality has been identified as one of the major problems of urbanization. For example, rapid urbanization in China was accompanied by the rising marginalization of disadvantaged social groups such as laid-off workers and rural migrants [22].

Abu Yousuf Md Abdullah, Jane Law, Christopher M Perlman, Zahid A Butt

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2022;8(7):e34782