The effect of residential urban greenness on allergic respiratory diseases in youth: A narrative review
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2020
Abstract:
Background: Environmental exposures across the life course may be a contributor to the
increased worldwide prevalence of respiratory and allergic diseases occurring in the last decades.
Asthma and rhinoconjunctivitis especially contribute to the global burden of disease. Greenness
has been suggested to have beneficial effects in terms of reduction of occurrence of allergic
respiratory diseases. However, the available evidence of a relationship between urban greenness
and childhood health outcomes is not yet conclusive. The current review aimed at investigating the
current state of evidence, exploring the relationship between children's exposure to residential
urban greenness and development of allergic respiratory diseases, jointly considering health
outcomes and study design.
Methods: The search strategy was designed to identify studies linking urban greenness exposure
to asthma, rhinoconjunctivitis, and lung function in children and adolescents. This was a narrative
review of literature following PRISMA guidelines performed using electronic search in databases of
PubMed and Embase (Ovid) from the date of inception to December 2018.
Results: Our search strategy identified 2315 articles; after exclusion of duplicates (n ΒΌ 701), 1614
articles were screened. Following review of titles and abstracts, 162 articles were identified as
potentially eligible. Of these, 148 were excluded following full-text evaluation, and 14 were
included in this review. Different methods for assessing greenness exposure were found; the most
used was Normalized Difference Vegetation Index. Asthma, wheezing, bronchitis, rhinoconjunctivitis,
allergic symptoms, lung function, and allergic sensitization were the outcomes
assessed in the identified studies; among them, asthma was the one most frequently investigated.
Conclusions: The present review showed inconsistencies in the results mainly due to differences
in study design, population, exposure assessment, geographic region, and ascertainment of
outcome. Overall, there is a suggestion of an association between urban greenness in early life
and the occurrence of allergic respiratory diseases during childhood, although the evidence is
still inconsistent. It is therefore hard to draw a conclusive interpretation, so that the understanding
of the impact of greenness on allergic respiratory diseases in children and adolescents remains
difficult.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
allergic respiratory diseases; greenness; review
Elenco autori:
LA GRUTTA, Stefania; Cilluffo, Giovanna
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