43 research outputs found

    Urban Domestic Gardens: Characteristics and Contributions to Urban Green Sustainability

    Get PDF
    Domestic gardens (e.g., home, allotment) are important features of the urban green infrastructure (GI) and represent significant component of the urban landscape. The present work aimed to evaluate the overall role and benefits of urban allotments and home gardens for the urban GI in the Global North countries. A literature review was performed to identify published evidence from 2000 onwards on the impact of domestic gardens for GI sustainability within developed countries. A narrative synthesis was used to interpret available research pertaining to urban domestic gardens per se, to define their unique role in GI and to highlight areas in need of further research. The review suggested key differences in both nature and management of urban domestic gardens with major implications for their contribution to GI sustainability. We also acknowledged the heterogeneous social, cultural, ecological, and economic contexts underlying the impact of urban domestic gardens for GI. Further, urban domestic gardens also act as a source of food security and provide additional ecosystem services. The review concluded that home and allotment gardens are important contributors to urban GI sustainability and should be incorporated within the planning, design and management of urban infrastructures

    COVID-19 ethnic inequalities in mental health and multimorbidities: protocol for the COVEIMM study

    Get PDF
    PURPOSE: The COVID-19 pandemic may have exacerbated ethnic health inequalities, particularly in people with multiple long-term health conditions, the interplay with mental health is unclear. This study investigates the impact of the pandemic on the association of ethnicity and multimorbidity with mortality/service use among adults, in people living with severe mental illnesses (SMI). METHODS: This study will utilise secondary mental healthcare records via the Clinical Record Interactive Search (CRIS) and nationally representative primary care records through the Clinical Practice Interactive Research Database (CPRD). Quasi-experimental designs will be employed to quantify the impact of COVID-19 on mental health service use and excess mortality by ethnicity, in people living with severe mental health conditions. Up to 50 qualitative interviews will also be conducted, co-produced with peer researchers; findings will be synthesised with quantitative insights to provide in-depth understanding of observed associations. RESULTS: 81,483 people in CRIS with schizophrenia spectrum, bipolar or affective disorder diagnoses, were alive from 1st January 2019. Psychiatric multimorbidities in the CRIS sample were comorbid somatoform disorders (30%), substance use disorders (14%) and personality disorders (12%). In CPRD, of 678,842 individuals with a prior probable diagnosis of COVID-19, 1.1% (N = 7493) had an SMI diagnosis. People in the SMI group were more likely to die (9% versus 2% in the non-SMI sample) and were more likely to have mental and physical multimorbidities. CONCLUSION: The effect of COVID-19 on people from minority ethnic backgrounds with SMI and multimorbidities remains under-studied. The present mixed methods study aims to address this gap

    Implementation of community screening strategies for depression

    Get PDF
    Community screening could be used for the monitoring, early detection and prevention of for depression, and to maximize the effects of the policies to reduce its burden.</p

    Multimorbidity clusters among people with serious mental illness : a representative primary and secondary data linkage cohort study

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: People with serious mental illness (SMI) experience higher mortality partially attributable to higher long-term condition (LTC) prevalence. However, little is known about multiple LTCs (MLTCs) clustering in this population. METHODS: People from South London with SMI and two or more existing LTCs aged 18+ at diagnosis were included using linked primary and mental healthcare records, 2012-2020. Latent class analysis (LCA) determined MLTC classes and multinominal logistic regression examined associations between demographic/clinical characteristics and latent class membership. RESULTS: The sample included 1924 patients (mean (s.d.) age 48.2 (17.3) years). Five latent classes were identified: 'substance related' (24.9%), 'atopic' (24.2%), 'pure affective' (30.4%), 'cardiovascular' (14.1%), and 'complex multimorbidity' (6.4%). Patients had on average 7-9 LTCs in each cluster. Males were at increased odds of MLTCs in all four clusters, compared to the 'pure affective'. Compared to the largest cluster ('pure affective'), the 'substance related' and the 'atopic' clusters were younger [odds ratios (OR) per year increase 0.99 (95% CI 0.98-1.00) and 0.96 (0.95-0.97) respectively], and the 'cardiovascular' and 'complex multimorbidity' clusters were older (ORs 1.09 (1.07-1.10) and 1.16 (1.14-1.18) respectively). The 'substance related' cluster was more likely to be White, the 'cardiovascular' cluster more likely to be Black (compared to White; OR 1.75, 95% CI 1.10-2.79), and both more likely to have schizophrenia, compared to other clusters. CONCLUSION: The current study identified five latent class MLTC clusters among patients with SMI. An integrated care model for treating MLTCs in this population is recommended to improve multimorbidity care
    corecore