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Objectives. Objectives:Engage public health and urban planning professions in inter-professional learning on urban environment and mental health of young children (>12) and families.Outputs: A training programme (2 half days);evidence summary; appraisal questionnaire . ?Strands' of literature. U
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1. Urban planning to promote the mental health of young children and families: a review of the evidence Dr. Anita Schrader McMillan
Warwick University Medical School
2. Objectives Objectives:
Engage public health and urban planning professions in inter-professional learning on urban environment and mental health of young children (>12) and families.
Outputs:
A training programme (2 half days);evidence summary; appraisal questionnaire
3. Strands of literature Urban poverty: indirect threats (the way poverty affects parenting). Good parenting buffers against external stressors. Urban poverty: direct threats of poor, dangerous, stigmatised environments
Nature
Social capital
Children have a unique perspective on their own environment not shared by adults
Childrens participation in planning enhances their sense of competence which enhances resilience
4. Focus of pilot: Coventry New Deal for Communities area
5. Cities and mental health Large cities are a relatively new phenomenon
Changes in household composition
Poverty + lack of social capital (community organisation) + lack of participation (+ in some contexts race) = associated with a range of risks to physical health (Young Foundation report on local wellbeing, 2008)
6. Theme 1: Evidence of risk
Indirect risks - affecting childrens parents, hence relationship and parenting quality (McLeod 1993). Robust research on the effect of parenting on all aspects of childrens development
Direct risks affect adolescents most obviously, but also younger children. Eg street design that enables crime; the broken glass syndrome (several studies, eg Dalgards & Tambs, 1997 in the UK)
7. Indirect risks - parenting Housing design: enables or disables social interaction of adults and children; social capital; play.
Social isolation of families (especially women) is, cross-culturally, highly associated with child increased risk to children
Aspects of environment can undermine social networks eg lack of interaction nodes; the grid system of roads; absence of places where people can congregate
Housing security: Arrears/repossessions have independent effects over financial hardship; comparable to divorce and job loss (Taylor et al 2007)
8. Direct and indirect risks often hard to separate
Household crowding lower motivation in task performance; restricted play; learned helplessness. When crowding + SES, higher preschooler aggression. Adults: lowered responsiveness
Noise - and childrens speech, cognitive development; reading; long-term memory
Housing quality: variety of negative outcomes; inversely related to learned helplessness.
(Systematic review by Evans, 2003)
9. Traffic volume = restriction in outdoor play and smaller social networks for 5-year-olds with diminishment of their social and motor skills (Huttenmoser 1995 ; Tranter & Pawson 2001)
10. Lack of access to nature (limits play; interaction with adults; social networks; cognitive development Taylor et al 1998).Playgrounds are not an adequate substitute (Tranter & Pawson 2001)
12. Child mental health indicators UK Parenting
Play
Risk factors tend to be cumulative
Resilience: better than expected outcomes in spite of exposure to risk factors (
How can regeneration promote resilience?
13. Does urban regeneration, in and of itself, necessarily improve mental health outcomes?
Urban regeneration does not, in and of itself, necessarily increase mental health outcomes of adults (1 large scale study South Manchester: Huxley, 2004) there may be sleeper effects
The urban regeneration initiative failed to address the concerns of local residents and failed to remove restricted opportunities, which appeared to be the key factor (ibid. 280)
Strong community organisations an be undermined by efforts to institutionalise them.
14. Theme 2: Exposure to natural environments can improve mental health Studies by Frances Kuo of greenspaces and child mental health
Physiological effects when humans encounter, observe or interact with nature; established and successful methods of nature-based therapy (eg horticulture, wilderness, animal contact)
Natural environments foster recovery from mental fatigue and stress (Maller, 2005)
15. Theme 4: Childrens participation in planning is critical
From perspective of developmental psychology: Childrens participation in decision making increases sense of competence and agency
This may begin to balance deprivation at home
16. Ridley Grove school, Australia Children involved in planning and implementing use of waste land connecting primary and secondary schools
Using a range of methods to educate children in spacial literacies (ways of thinking about space) and critical literacies how they would recreate the space
Children created visual artifacts (models, maps) to guide the creation of the new space
Cognitive and social skills
Developmental competence in the real world
Belonging
Wish to become architects, to explore university
17. Repairing urban space, Oregon, USA (Semeneza 2003) City Repair is non-governmental all work done by volunteers old and young adults, children, youth, homeless people
Repair is physical, social and symbolic = participation
Examples of physical improvements:
Neighbourhood kiosks with bulletin boards for information exchange (news, sales, etc)
Benches esp for older people; decorated with stained glass mosaics
Trellises at the corners of intersections
Street murals in intersections
Solar powered lanterns to light the streets in the evenings
Planter boxes in non parking zones of intersections enforce no parking rules
18. Intersection Repair project Significant improvements in mental health measures after the intervention (pre and post)
P<0.0001 - improved mental health;
0.02 social integration;
0.03 social competence
19. Future policy and practice should incorporate the following: Participation of local residents with specific attention to preschool and primary school children in all aspects of the planning and regeneration process.
Creation of green spaces for unstructured play (e.g. open spaces and parks)
Improve housing including attention to noise levels and congestion in addition to overall housing quality and housing security.
20. Conclusions Environments influence (i) parenting (ii) play (iii) social interaction (iv) development of childrens competence and resilience.
Overall improvements in housing are associated with improved mental health of adults
The process of regeneration is critical, as it can enable or disable social interaction/social capital.
Childrens active involvement in planning and implementing changes in their environment can compensate for deficits in other areas of their lives = promote resilience.
Questions:
How do we mainstream the participation of preschool and primary school age children in urban regeneration?
What are the effects of the coming recession on highest risk environments?