Women living near natural vegetation
live longer: Study
Women live longer in
areas with more green vegetation, according to a new study which found that
females with the highest levels of greenness near their homes had a 12 per cent
lower death rate compared to ones with the lowest levels of vegetation near
their homes.
Researchers found the biggest
differences in death rates were from kidney disease, respiratory disease, and
cancer. They also explored how an environment with trees, shrubs, and plants
might lower mortality rates. They showed that improved mental health and social
engagement are the strongest factors, while increased physical activity and
reduced air pollution also contribute.
"It is important to know that
trees and plants provide health benefits in our communities, as well as
beauty," said Linda Birnbaum from National Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences (NIEHS) in the US.
"The finding of reduced mortality
suggests that vegetation may be important to health in a broad range of
ways," said Birnbaum. The study, conducted by scientists at Harvard TH
Chan School of Public Health and Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston,
examined greenness around the homes of 108,630 women in the long-term Nurses'
Health Study.
Researchers mapped home locations and
used high resolution satellite imagery to determine the level of vegetation
within 250 metres and 1,250 metres of homes. They then followed the women from
2000 to 2008, tracking changes in vegetation and participant deaths. During the
study, 8,604 deaths occurred.
Scientists consistently found lower
mortality rates in women as levels of trees and plants increased around their
homes. This trend was seen for separate causes of death, as well as when all
causes were combined.
When researchers compared women in the
areas with highest greenness to women in the lowest, they found a 41 per cent
lower death rate for kidney disease, 34 per cent lower death rate for
respiratory disease, and 13 per cent lower death rate for cancer in the
greenest areas.
Women with the highest levels of
vegetation, or greenness, near their homes had a 12 percent lower death rate
compared to women with the lowest levels of vegetation near their homes,
researchers said.
The findings were published in the journal Environmental
Health Perspectives.
Source: www.zeenews.india.com
18.04.2016
Keep the ones
that push you forward and delete the ones that hold you back
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