Login / Signup

Association of environmental and socioeconomic indicators with serious mental illness diagnoses identified from general practitioner practice data in England: A spatial Bayesian modelling study.

Joana CruzGuangquan LiMaría José Aragón AragónPeter A CoventryRowena JacobsStephanie L PradyPiran C L White
Published in: PLoS medicine (2022)
Our study provides further evidence on the significance of socioeconomic associations in patterns of SMI but emphasises the additional importance of considering environmental characteristics alongside socioeconomic variables in understanding these patterns. In this study, we did not observe a significant association between green space and SMI prevalence, but we did identify an apparent association between green spaces with a lake and SMI prevalence. Deprivation, higher concentrations of air pollution, and higher proportion of ethnic minorities were associated with higher SMI prevalence, supporting a social-ecological approach to public health prevention. It also provides evidence of the significance of spatial analysis in revealing the importance of place and context in influencing area-based patterns of SMI.
Keyphrases
  • public health
  • mental illness
  • air pollution
  • risk factors
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • climate change
  • human health
  • magnetic resonance
  • cystic fibrosis
  • electronic health record
  • diffusion weighted imaging
  • global health