Background: The aetiology of allergic respiratory disease in children is not yet fully understood. Environmental factors are believed to play a major part. The amount of green vegetation surrounding the home (residential greenness) has been recently identified as a potentially important exposure
Objectives: Our goal was to provide a systematic review and quantitative summary of the evidence regarding the relationship between residential greenness and allergic respiratory diseases in children.
Methods: Peer-reviewed literature published prior to 1 March 2017 was systematically searched using nine electronic databases. Meta-analyses were conducted if at least three studies published risk estimates for the same outcome and exposure measures.
Results: We included 11 articles across broad outcomes of asthma and allergic rhinitis. Reported effects were inconsistent with varying measures to define residential greenness. Only limited meta-analysis could be conducted, with the pooled odds ratios for asthma (OR 1.01 95%CI 0.93, 1.09; I-2 68.1%) and allergic rhinitis (OR 0.99 95%CI 0.87, 1.12; I-2 72.9%) being significantly heterogeneous.
Conclusions: Inconsistencies between the studies were too large to accurately assess the association between residential greenness and allergic respiratory disease. A standardised global measure of greenness which accounts for seasonal variation at a specific relevant buffer size is needed to create a more cohesive body of evidence and for future examination of the effect of residential greenness on allergic respiratory diseases.
- Lambert, K. A.
- Bowatte, G.
- Tham, R.
- Lodge, C.
- Prendergast, L.
- Heinrich, J.
- Abramson, M. J.
- Dharmage, S. C.
- Erbas, B.
Keywords
- greenness
- asthma
- allergic rhinitis
- paediatric
- ndvi
- lidar
- emergency-department visits
- quality-of-life
- new-york-city
- childhood asthma
- pediatric asthma
- air-pollution
- birth cohort
- case-crossover
- pollen
- associations