Examining Psychosocial and Economic Barriers to Green Space Access for Racialised Individuals and Families: A Narrative Literature Review of the Evidence to Date
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Deprivation in Racialised Individuals/Families’
1.2. Social Prescribing
1.3. Green Space
1.4. Racial Disparities in Green Space Access and Green Social Prescribing
1.5. Theoretical Underpinning for Racial Disparities in Green Space
1.6. International Evidence
1.7. Gentrification
1.8. Rationale
1.9. Review Aims
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Developing Search Terms
2.3. Data Sources and Selection
2.4. Eligibility Criteria
2.5. Screening
2.6. Data Extraction and Synthesiscu
2.6.1. Data Extraction
2.6.2. Quality Appraisal
2.6.3. Data Synthesis
3. Results
3.1. Study Characteristics (Table 4)
3.1.1. Study Settings
3.1.2. Study Designs
3.1.3. Participant Characteristics
3.1.4. Green Space Categorisation
3.1.5. Outcome Measures
Publication Details (Author/Publication Year) | Location | Study Aims | Participants | Racialised Communities | Intervention Study Design Variables | Outcome Measures | Outcomes/Results | Key Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Das et al., (2016) [82] | Minneapolis, MN (USA) | Increase awareness of park related health benefits and remove specific park use barriers among minority and foreign-born communities. | Probability Sampling method. Sample: n = 568 participants: Age ≥ 18 Male: n = 225 Female: n = 343 White participants: n = 331 Educated: n = 331 Years in neighbourhood: 7.2 | Black: n = 138 Asian: n = 29 American Indian: n = 55 Hispanic: 93 Foreign born (n = 129) | Cross-sectional design Between-subjects comparison Dependent variables:
Self-report measure of race/ethnicity | Likert-scale questionnaires (administered in four different languages (English, Spanish, Somali, and Hmong) Determine:
| Foreign-born residents, Blacks and Hispanics highlighted the barriers to park use were:
| To improve the design of park strategies, services must address health disparities and remove the barriers that minorities and foreign-born communities face. Acknowledged limitations: The study only includes three neighborhoods in Minneapolis. |
Derose et al., (2015) [83] | Los Angeles, California (USA) | Examine racial ethnic differences in park use and physical activity among adult residents | Momentary time sampling Sample: n = 7506 Participants: Age ≥ 18 White: n = 1594 Gender data not specified Residency: living within one mile of 50 parks in Los Angeles | Black: n = 807 Latino-English: n = 858 Latino-Spanish: n = 3735 Asian/PI/other: n = 512 | Cross-sectional designs Between subjects’ comparison Dependent variables: -Park use—(defined as the number of times residents visited their neighbourhood park in 7 days) -Physical activity—(inactive—less than 50 min of physical exercise a week and active—more than 150 min) -Physical activity in parks -Social interactions in parks Independent variables: -Self-reported racial/ethnic group. -Park-level co-variates: -Park size (acres) -Park location in commercial vs. residential area (within one mile radius) -Proportion of households in poverty -Number of observed organised activities -Number of observed supervised activities -Association between neighbourhood racial-ethnic diversity and park use. | Park use—Measurement of park use questionnaire [90]. Physical activity—self-report measure created by researcher, based on government guidelines. Combined information of physical activity and park use created a “exercise vital sign” [91]. Use of parks for exercise—via self-report—(categorised by; (1) does not exercise, (2) exercises but not in parks, (3) exercises in park. Use of parks for social interaction—via self-report (categorised by; (1) does not go to the park (2) goes to park alone (3) goes to park alone but sees/meets others there or (4) goes to park accompanied. Association between neighbourhood racial-ethnic diversity and park use—measured via 2010 Census data and Simpson Index. | Regression models and bivariate analyses found that Blacks and English-speaking Latinos were less likely to report exercising outside of parks and more likely to socialise in parks. Blacks and Latinos were less likely to report exercising in all domains, compared to Whites. However, Spanish-speaking Latinos and Whites and reported using parks for exercise and socialising. | Urban parks appear to be an important resource for physical activity and socialisation, especially in Spanish-speaking Latino and Asian groups. More efforts are needed for other racial-ethnic minorities to experience the same benefits. Acknowledged limitations: data came from two cross-sectional surveys and causality could be inferred. Most measures were based on self-report and subject to recall and social desirability bias. |
Dolash et al., (2015) [84] | San Antario, Texas (USA) | Assess factors associated with park use (in six parks) and physical activity among park users in predominantly Hispanic neighbourhoods | Opportunity sampling—to gain participants Sample: n = 2340) Unable to collect gender demographics Age: adults, adolescents (13 to 18 years old), and children (3–18) | Predominantly Hispanics | Mixed methods, Cross-sectional research design Two trained research assistants visited each study park across 3 days at the same time. -Assessed the park environment, presence of park features and park quality. Data collectors’ assessments were compared with measure interrater reliability. Additionally, observed physical activity at pre-determined play spaces. Play space activity was also scanned. Dependent variables: -Parks/play spaces available -Park use/physical activity -Motivations and barriers of park use Independent variables: -Ethnicity -Days of the week -Time (Afternoon/evening) -Play spaces (field, basketball, playground, tennis court, track/trail, fitness stations, baseball, and horseshoes) Park condition (nonrenovated: n = 4 and renovated: n = 2) | Park use—measured by direct observations (via the Parks and Play Spaces Direct Observation Tool; McKenzie et al., 2006) [92] Physical activity—measured by “computing energy expenditure by multiplying the total number of people in the play space, by a multiplicative constant, based on activity intensity. Physical activity energy expenditure scores represent the average kcal/kg/minute for each person in the play space, during the scan”. Parks/play spaces available—measured by an audit tool Park environment—measured by the Parks and Play Spaces Environmental Audit Tool [93]. Semi-structured interviews, for approximately 5 min (n = 51), assessing motivations and barriers of park use
| Renovated parks had higher Physical expenditure scores, than non-renovated parks. Basketball courts had a significantly higher number of vigorously active park users. Thematic analysis found four themes that explained lack of park use and physical activity:
| Renovations to park amenities (increasing basketball courts, trail availability) could increase physical activity in low-socioeconomic-status populations. Acknowledged limitations: Cross-sectional design restricts understanding of causal mechanisms underlying the behaviour. The study data was collected in the winter and could not observe seasonal changes. Unable to collect data on race, ethnicity, or gender during observations. |
Fernandez et al., (2015) [81] | Chicago, (USA) | Examine the difference in access to natural environments and acculturation levels among Latinos from two urban communities in Chicago. | Stratified sampling Sample: n = 376 Participants: Male: (n = 172) Women: (n = 204) Age: Adults Controlled for: -Education level -Income level -Generation status (e.g., born in U.S./Immigrant) -Average years spent in UK -Acculturation level | Mexican (n = 154) Puerto Rican (n = 20) Other Latin American country (n = 14) | Cross-sectional design Between groups comparison Questionnaires were randomly distributed to 392 Latino households, within two Chicago neighbourhoods. Measurements of; -Demographics -Participation in recreation activities -Acculturation -Access to natural environments | Self-report questionnaires for:
-Acculturation, measured by; The Bi-dimensional Acculturation Scale for Hispanics—BAS, [94] | Access to natural environments significantly increases the likelihood of recreation participation. | Increased access to natural environments for Latino communities is needed as a future intervention, to improve usage. Acknowledged limitation: Participants’ recall was used to measure recreation participation and therefore, participants could distort their true participation rate. Did not account for other factors related to accessibility (e.g., the ease of navigating and attractiveness of park features). Items related to acculturation (e.g., time spent in the US) not accounted for. Did not control for the ethnic origin of Latinos. Low response rates were also a concern. |
Lee at al., (2015) [79] | Houston and Austin, Texas (USA) | To create and test an index to indicate availability and quality of physical activity (PA) resources (PARs) to examine associations between access to quality PARs and changes in PA. This assessment was completed on “minority women over time”. , Additionally, to determine whether this association differed in women from lower and higher income neighbourhoods. | Volunteer sampling Sample of Women (n = 410) Low/median/high income areas (Demographic information about ethnicity and household income, was adapted from the Maternal and Infant Health Assessment Survey [95]. | African American Hispanic/Latina women | Randomised control trial Between groups comparison Longitudinal, 6-month intervention Participants attended a baseline time health assessment. Completed: -interviewer-administered questionnaire -Physical assessment -Packet (with more detailed questions) to complete before the next meeting one week later. This was also a “run-in” procedure to discourage less interested participants before randomisation. Women who completed the packet were randomized into one of two intervention group Experimental group: HIP procedures Two groups:
Baseline: -Health assessment completed -Interviewer administered questionnaires -Physical assessment (given a packet to complete before the next meeting, approximately 1 week later). The 6-month face-to-face intervention included behavioural methods to promote group cohesion and to account for environmental factors contributing to health disparities. Women participated in team-building activities, environmental mapping exercises, and supervised walks or taste tests. After 6 months, women returned to complete identical health assessments. A subset of women (n = 59), completed a questionnaire and accelerometer to measure moderate to vigorous physical activity. Environmental cross-sectional and longitudinal individual level data determined the relationship between PAR and physical activity. | Self-report: The International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ) Measured self-reported physical activity, including work-related, transportation, domestic, and leisure-time physical activity (walking—moderate- vigorous-intensity physical activity, over the last 7 days). Physical activity resources were audited using the PARA (physical activity resource assessment [79]. Quality of physical activity resources were determined by a composite index (QPAR) of features, amenities, and incivilities. Body Mass Index (BMI)—calculated height and weight Physical activity was reported as metabolic equivalent of task (MET)- as minutes per week | Repeated measures ANOVA was used to show that; Women in neighbourhoods with lower quality of physical activity resources, showed small increases in physical activity, compared to women in neighbourhoods with higher quality park resources. These women also showed increased vigorous physical activity. | Access to better quality physical activity resources can help improve physical activity, regardless of neighbourhood income. However, physical activity resource quality is a distinctly important predictor of physical activity in ethnic minority women. Acknowledged limitations: The use of a median split to define income groups. |
Mc Eachen et al., (2018) [80] | Bradford, (United Kingdom) | Explore associations between availability of, satisfaction with, and use of green space mental wellbeing among children aged 4 years in a multi-ethnic sample | Part of a wider study (Wright et al., 2012). Judgment sampling used. Sample n = 2594 Participants: Male: n = 1302 Female: n = 1292 Age: Children (4–5 years) Mothers of adult age. | White British: n = 740 South Asian: n = 1519 Other ethnicity (Black-African, Bangladeshi, and mixed race): n = 333 | Cohort study/Longitudinal study (2007–2011) of 12,453 mothers recruited during their pregnancy and 13,776. Between subjects’ comparison | Access to residential green space (measured via the NDVI (normalised difference vegetation index; [96]. Self-report, Likert-scale questionnaires (completed by parents of the children) Assessed:
| Unadjusted regression models were computed. Covariates were entered sequentially in logical blocks. Significant associations between availability of green space and behavioural difficulties in South Asian children living in deprived areas in the UK. More green space was associated with fewer behavioural difficulties. Ratings of satisfaction with green space was independently predictive of South Asian children’s mental wellbeing. | Poor quality parks and green spaces can discourage use by racialised communities. Satisfaction with green space is a more important predictor of wellbeing the quantity of green space. Public health professionals and urban planners need to focus on both the quality and quantity of green space to promote health, particularly in ethnic minorities. Acknowledged limitations: Mostly could not control for the effect of maternal mental wellbeing on children’s outcomes. Green space exposure was measured differently, throughout. May have caused mixed research Findings. Parental self-reporting could be subject to response bias. |
Razani et al., (2020) [68] | Oakland, California, (USA) | Prior to park prescription, do park visitors face fewer sociodemographic barriers to park use, have more information about park location, increase park visits, increase park knowledge, and have more nature affinity as well as perceive less barriers to visiting parks. | Part of a wider study (Razani et al., 2016) Volunteer sampling and paid for participation ($40). Sample (n = 78) Caregivers and their children partook in the study. Participants: Female Caregiver: n = 68 Age—Children 4–17 years. Demographics/characteristic included: Age Race/ethnicity Immigration status Poverty level | African American (n = 52) Non-Latino White (n = 8) Latino (n = 12) Other (n = 5) | Randomised control trial Between-subjects comparison Families were randomized into two groups: -A supported group was invited to three organized group outings to parks. They received weekly text messages to remind them of the benefits of nature and encourage them to visit their parks. -Other group was free to visit parks on their own. Additionally, measured: -Baseline Park use per week (via self-report) -Park use over time. Caregivers reported on their weekly park visits at one and three months after receiving a park prescription. Predictors were: Knowledge, attitudes, and perceived access over time. These caregiver characteristics were measured at baseline, and at one and three months after receiving a park prescription | Baseline Park use per week—measured by self-report—caregivers reported their own park visit behaviour as well as the park visit behaviour of their children. Park use over time. Caregivers reported on their weekly park visits at one and three months after receiving a park prescription. | At baseline, White families were more likely to use parks, have prior knowledge park locations, value time in parks with family, and feel safe in their neighbourhood for their child to play. However, they were not more likely to value nature. After participants received a park prescription, park use increased as participants reported increased level of information about the location of parks, nature affinity and perceptions about time and resource availability. Non-white respondents and those who lacked neighbourhood safety were less likely to visit parks even once a week. | This study is the first to suggest that behavioural health theory will benefit the park prescription movement. This study suggests that the same populations at risk for health inequities in chronic illness are those who may be visiting parks less at baseline. Acknowledged limitations: Small sample size. Did not find significant differences in income level and frequency of park visits, Lack of precision in defining what park/nature is Study conducted in an urban center, so patients might not have access to parks with natural elements. No control over which parks participants visited. |
Roe et al., (2016) [65] | United Kingdom (Midlands, Greater Manchester, and London) | How does general health differ between ethnic groups and what are the distinguishing health profiles? How does use and perceptions of neighbourhood environment/green space differ between ethnic groups? What demographics, social and physical attributes of place predict general health amongst different ethnicity general health profiles? | Quota sampling Sample: n = 523 Participants: Male: n = 40% Female: n = 60% Adults (over 16 years old) Age: 16+ | White British: n = 114 Indian: n = 57 African-Caribbean: n = 63 Bangladesh: n = 89 Pakistani: n = 115 Other “BME”: n = 85 | Cross sectional study. Household questionnaire explored the relationship between general health and individual, social, physical, and environmental predictors in deprived White British and British BME groups. Measured: Demographics General/physical health Social environment Neighbourhood environment Local green space | Demographics, general/physical health, social environment (perceptions of loneliness/place belonging) and neighbourhood environment, were measured via self-report Likert scales, based on local government recommendations (e.g., British Heart Foundation National Centre) Green space was measured via self-report, Likert-scale questionnaires assessing three items:
| White British people found social characteristics of place (place belonging, levels of neighbourhood trust, loneliness) predictors of general health. Access to, use of and quality of urban green space was a significant predictor of general health in BME populations. | There needs to be better support for health in ethnic minorities, with the enhancement of green space in their environments. Acknowledged limitations: Included small numbers of racialised groups (e.g., Chinese, white European), had to aggregate some data, therefore losing distinctiveness across some ethnic groups, and generalisations were made. Limited in “best” health group (participants from Indian origin (n = 57)). Needed a larger sample size. Generalisations of findings may be difficult, due to differences in scale, context, culture, and geography. Subjective, self-report data is limited to bias. Used a standardized measures for general health to compare findings with the wider population. However, did not understand what health and wellbeing meant to different populations. |
Schultz et al. (2017) [85] | Columbia, Missouri, (USA) | Evaluate the impact of street-crossing infrastructure modifications on park use/park-based activity in low income and African American communities. | Opportunity sampling Sample: n = 2080 Male: n = 1129 Female: n = 951 (preintervention) n = 2275 (post intervention) n = 2276 (follow up) Age: child 1–12 years, teen 13–20 years, adult 21–59 years, or senior 60+ years. Child (n = 574 pre; n = 555 post; n = 684 follow up) Teen (n = 362 pre; n = 441 post; n = 292 follow up) Adult (n = 1093 pre; 1159 post; 1177 follow up) Senior (n = 51 pre; n = 120 post; 121 follow-up) | African American Pre-intervention: n = 1483 Post-intervention: n = 1615 Follow-up: n = 1588 Other populations observed: White Other ethnicities were coded, but not included in the final data sample, e.g., Hispanic, Asian/unsure) | Natural/Observation experiment Within-subjects comparison Independent variable = Race (African American/White) Dependent Variable = Park use/physical activity after an installation of 26 signalised crossing | Observed Park use—measured by the modified System for Observing Play and Recreation in Communities (SOPARC; [92])—Uses momentary time sampling technique to collect systematic scans of park users to access park use within pre-determined activity areas. The 26 park activity areas were visually scanned left to right by trained observers and the codes representing park users and physical activity levels were recorded on a standardized form. The codes for physical activity also provided estimates of energy expenditure (EE) by assigning Metabolic Equivalents (METs) to recorded categories of physical activity following previous research (Sedentary = 1.5 METs, Moderate = 3 METs, Vigorous = 6 METs [97]. | The installation of crosswalk signals improved park use overall. | Lack of safe access to parks may have been a barrier to park us in African American adult women. Acknowledged limitations: Infrastructure changes in the park (i.e., renovated fitness equipment and new walking trails) during the autumn 2013, led to site being unusable longitudinally. Intrapersonal and interpersonal factors are not addressed in this study. Extraneous variables (e.g., changes in crime rates), could not be controlled for. Observations of time frames based on natural rhythms of The community were not done. For example, a fourth (6:30 pm) time frame was Dropped, due safety concerns. Weather was measured only via temperature and no other measures to corroborate this (e.g., humidity). Observer bias in researchers. |
Xiao et al., (2016) [86] | New York City (USA) | Examine the role of transportation in visiting national parks by three racial/ethnic groups. | Recruited via judgment sampling from an online survey Sample n = 600 Controlled for: -Age (all ages included) -Household income -Education Gender: Male: n = 128 Female: n = 172 White: n = 100 | Hispanic n = 100 Black: n = 100 | Cross-sectional study Between-subjects compassion Measured: -Sociodemographic information -Visitation to a National Park Service (NPS) Area in Last Two Years by Race/Ethnicity. - Barriers to Visiting National Parks - Agreement with Transportation Incentives | General Population survey Measured (all via self-report measures):
| 37% of White residents visited national parks, within the last two years, compared to 31% Hispanics and 23% Blacks. Barriers to access to national parks were divided into three categories (comfort and safety, expense, and accessibility). Hispanics reported significantly higher comfort and safety barriers, compared to Whites. Black Park visitors reported comfort and safety a higher barrier than Black non-visitors. Blacks and Hispanics reported expense (cost of transport, food, entrance fees and lodging) as their greatest limitation to park access. Ethnic minorities also reported accessibility (means of transportation) as a barrier, compared to White counterparts. Hispanics were also more accepting of incentives (e.g., less expensive, faster, and better means of travelling to the parks), than Whites. | The barriers highlighted link with the marginality hypothesis and the role of transportation incentives. Transportation incentives may be more crucial for attracting a more representative audience, to national parks. Acknowledged limitations: Online survey led to lower response rates. Well-educated respondents were overrepresented. Future research could “explore the differences in outdoor recreation preferences among racial/ethnic groups and the relationship between barriers to visitation and recreation preferences”. |
3.2. Critical Appraisal
3.3. Overview of Findings/Barriers Highlighted (Figure 2)
3.3.1. Interpersonal
Feeling Unwelcome/Out of Place
Cultural/Language Restrictions
Low Motivation to Exercise in Green Space
3.3.2. Practical
Financial Concerns
Poor Quality/Aesthetics of Green Space
3.3.3. Environmental
Less Access/Availability to Green Space, Based on Location
Safety Concerns/Comfort/Less Trust in Neighbourhood
3.3.4. Experience/Knowledge
Prior Knowledge about Parks and Locations
Nature Affinity
4. Discussion
4.1. Interpersonal
4.2. Practical
4.3. Environmental
4.4. Green Gentrification
4.5. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Search ID # | Search Terms | Search Fields | Results |
---|---|---|---|
S1 | bame or bme or black or “ethnic minority” or “ethnic differences” or “ethnic inequalities” or “rac* inequalit*” or asian or Hispanic or latin* or “cultural sensitivity” or rac* or “rac* communities” or “minorit* communities” or racist or “cultural diversit*” or “super-diversit*” or “minority ethnic” or multicultural* or transnational or migra* or transnational or inequality or ethnocultural or ethno-cultural or ethnocentric or multiculture or multi-culture or poc or “people of colo*” or melanated or melanin or diversit* or non-white or “non white” or “environmental racism” or deprived or “urban communities” | All fields | 469,402 |
S2 | “green space*” or green-space or “outdoor spaces” or “natural spaces” or “natur* environments” or “open grass” or “nature-based” or “nature based” or “nature-based interventions” or “nature-based interventions” or “green social prescribing” or “green exercise” or “public green space” or parks or “recreational park*” or “open-space*” or “national parks” or “urban area*” or neighbourhood | All fields | 87,454 |
S3 | accessibility or access or “easy access” or availability or readiness or “ease of use” or convenience or appropriate* | 362,813 | |
S4 | S1, S2 and S3 | All fields | 986 |
Appendix B
Search ID # | Search Terms | Search Fields | Results |
---|---|---|---|
S1 | bame or bme or black or “ethnic minority” or “ethnic differences” or “ethnic inequalities” or “rac* inequalit*” or asian or Hispanic or latin* or “cultural sensitivity” or rac* or “rac* communities” or “minorit* communities” or racist or “cultural diversit*” or “super-diversit*” or “minority ethnic” or multicultural* or transnational or migra* or transnational or inequality or ethnocultural or ethno-cultural or ethnocentric or multiculture or multi-culture or poc or “people of colo*” or melanated or melanin or diversit* or non-white or “non white” or “environmental racism” or deprived or “urban communities” | All fields | 393,628 |
S2 | “green space*” or green-space or “outdoor spaces” or “natural spaces” or “natur* environments” or “open grass” or “nature-based” or “nature based” or “nature-based interventions” or “nature-based interventions” or “green social prescribing” or “green exercise” or “public green space” or parks or “recreational park*” or “open-space*” or “national parks” or “urban area*” or neighbourhood | All fields | 83,242 |
S3 | accessibility or access or “easy access” or availability or readiness or “ease of use” or convenience or appropriate* | 541,291 | |
S4 | S1, S2 and S3 | All fields | 1514 |
Appendix C
Search ID # | Search Terms | Search Fields | Results |
---|---|---|---|
S1 | bame or bme or black or “ethnic minority” or “ethnic differences” or “ethnic inequalities” or “rac* inequalit*” or asian or Hispanic or latin* or “cultural sensitivity” or rac* or “rac* communities” or “minorit* communities” or racist or “cultural diversit*” or “super-diversit*” or “minority ethnic” or multicultural* or transnational or migra* or transnational or inequality or ethnocultural or ethno-cultural or ethnocentric or multiculture or multi-culture or poc or “people of colo*” or melanated or melanin or diversit* or non-white or “non white” or “environmental racism” or deprived or “urban communities” | All fields | 3,692,777 |
S2 | “green space*” or green-space or “outdoor spaces” or “natural spaces” or “natur* environments” or “open grass” or “nature-based” or “nature based” or “nature-based interventions” or “nature-based interventions” or “green social prescribing” or “green exercise” or “public green space” or parks or “recreational park*” or “open-space*” or “national parks” or “urban area*” or neighbourhood | All fields | 577,967 |
S3 | accessibility or access or “easy access” or availability or readiness or “ease of use” or convenience or appropriate* | 3,680,589 | |
S4 | S1, S2 and S3 | All fields | 1984 |
Appendix D
Line | Search Terms | Search Fields | Results |
---|---|---|---|
#1 | bame or bme or black or “ethnic minority” or “ethnic differences” or “ethnic inequalities” or “rac* inequalit*” or asian or Hispanic or latin* or “cultural sensitivity” or rac* or “rac* communities” or “minorit* communities” or racist or “cultural diversit*” or “super-diversit*” or “minority ethnic” or multicultural* or transnational or migra* or transnational or inequality or ethnocultural or ethno-cultural or ethnocentric or multiculture or multi-culture or poc or “people of colo*” or melanated or melanin or diversit* or non-white or “non white” or “environmental racism” or deprived or “urban communities” | Title, abstract, keywords | 5480 |
#2 | MeSH descriptor: [Green Space] explode all trees | MeSH | 330 |
#3 | accessibility or access or “easy access” or availability or readiness or “ease of use” or convenience or appropriate* | Title, abstract, keywords | 1,228,395 |
#5 | #1 AND #2 AND #3 | Title, abstract, keywords | 9 |
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PICO Criteria | Operationalisation of Search Terms |
---|---|
Population | Individuals who originate from a racialised community |
Intervention | Green space/outdoor recreation access |
Comparison | Within-subject comparison (pre/post intervention) or between-subject comparison with white counterparts |
Outcome | Improved green space access and/or physical/mental health benefits |
Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
---|---|
Participants:
| Literature that did not focus on racialised communities. |
Design:
|
|
Intervention:
| Research that focused on urban planning/urban forestry, with a geographical focus |
Outcome:
|
|
Data Extraction Category | Column Heading |
---|---|
Publication details | First author, year, type of publication, brief study aims, title of article |
Study design | Study location, study design, comparison, randomisation, blinding, effectiveness of blinding. |
Participant characteristics | Study sample description, total sample size analysed, power calculation for sample size, participation rate, definition of low income, sample age group, age, gender, total N female, total % female, ethnicity, education, employment, living situation, health status, annual income, sampling/how recruited, descriptive data of demographics, notes. |
Racialised communities | Ethnic/cultural background of participants included in the study. |
Intervention | Experimental intervention, intervention detail, intervention type, aim of intervention, who provided intervention, setting, key characteristics of setting, intervention frequency, intervention duration, control intervention (if used), any theoretical frameworks used to develop intervention, notes. |
Outcomes | Method of data collection, who collected data, within/between subjects differences, primary outcome(s), primary outcome measure(s), outcome measure(s) detail, outcome measure respondent, validity/reliability of measure, timepoints, statistical tests used, comparison reported, effect size, description of findings, secondary outcome(s), secondary outcome measure(s), outcome measure(s) detail, outcome measure respondent, validity/reliability of measure, timepoints, comparison reported, effect size, description of findings, intervention compliance, intervention other findings. |
Key observations | Discussion point, strengths, limitations, user/stakeholder involvement in design/conduct of study, theory/conceptual models used, critical appraisal points, other comments. |
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Robinson, T.; Robertson, N.; Curtis, F.; Darko, N.; Jones, C.R. Examining Psychosocial and Economic Barriers to Green Space Access for Racialised Individuals and Families: A Narrative Literature Review of the Evidence to Date. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 745. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010745
Robinson T, Robertson N, Curtis F, Darko N, Jones CR. Examining Psychosocial and Economic Barriers to Green Space Access for Racialised Individuals and Families: A Narrative Literature Review of the Evidence to Date. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(1):745. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010745
Chicago/Turabian StyleRobinson, Tila, Noelle Robertson, Ffion Curtis, Natalie Darko, and Ceri R. Jones. 2023. "Examining Psychosocial and Economic Barriers to Green Space Access for Racialised Individuals and Families: A Narrative Literature Review of the Evidence to Date" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 1: 745. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010745
APA StyleRobinson, T., Robertson, N., Curtis, F., Darko, N., & Jones, C. R. (2023). Examining Psychosocial and Economic Barriers to Green Space Access for Racialised Individuals and Families: A Narrative Literature Review of the Evidence to Date. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(1), 745. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010745