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Cities and Mental Health


City life damages mental health in ways we're just starting to ...

City dwellers face a nearly 40 percent higher risk of depression, 20 percent higher chance of anxiety, and double the risk of schizophrenia than people living ...

Mindful Cities: The Impact of Urban Design on Mental Health

Cities can create environments that promote social cohesion, aiding mental well-being and fostering a sense of collective pride and identity.

The Mental Health Challenge You're Exposed to as a City-Dweller

Furthermore, the air pollution from the traffic noise can also impact Jane's brain activity. But even more critical is the fact that these same issues are what ...

Which Is Better for Your Mental Health: The City or the Country?

A number of studies have sought to determine whether city or country is better for mental health by drawing on national survey data.

The Case for Green Space: A Cost-Effective Mental Health Resource

In our rapidly urbanizing world, more than half of the global population have made their homes in cities. Unfortunately, as we migrate to urban ...

Smart cities could make people feel better. Literally. | Interact

Cities may make the brain more susceptible to mental-health conditions, notably depression, anxiety, and schizophrenia.

How urban design impacts mental health - The Hindu

Cities are associated with higher rates of most mental health problems compared to rural areas: an almost 40% higher risk of depression, over 20% more of ...

Future cities must prioritize mental health of young people

Future cities must prioritize mental health of young people ... Halfpoint/Getty Images The researchers solicited suggestions that could improve city planning by ...

2022's Best Cities for Mental Wellness - LawnStarter

Naperville, Illinois, takes first place overall and in Financial Wellness. A small share of adults with poor mental health and low divorce rates ...

Top 15 cities with the worst mental health conditions

GCU measured the number of workers assisting with substance abuse, behavioral disorders, and mental health, per 100,000 people, and those ...

Neighborhood Features Impact Mental Health for Better and Worse

Sidewalks, single-lane roads and street signs could all be part of the path to a community's mental and physical health, for better or worse ...

Does City Life Pose a Risk to Mental Health? | Scientific American

Converging evidence has revealed that growing up in the city doubles the risk of developing psychosis later in life. Studies have also begun to ...

Is Urban Living Bad for Your Mental Health? | Psychology Today

The researchers found that only 18.5 percent of their participants were mentally well. Nearly a quarter of them were impaired by mental health problems.

Urban jungle: How city living may impact mental health

A recent study published in Nature Medicine explores the effects of the urban environment on adult mental health.

Urban health - World Health Organization (WHO)

Over 55% of the world's population live in urban areas – a proportion that is expected to increase to 68% by 2050. As most future urban growth will take place ...

Urban vs. Rural Living: Weighing the Impact on Mental Health

Studies in recent years have revealed that city residents are over 20% more likely to develop an anxiety disorder and almost 40% more likely to develop a mood ...

How City Living May Be Harming Your Mental Health - HuffPost

How City Living May Be Harming Your Mental Health, And What You Can Do About It ... City life can take a serious toll on your mental health.

More Evidence of the Benefits of Trees in Urban Areas - Psychiatry.org

Exposure to low-lying vegetation (such as bushes) was not associated a mental health outcome. The researchers accounted for age, gender, income, education level ...

New Research Reveals Which May Be Better For Mental Health

The results show no clear correlation that dense inner city areas impact on depression. This may be because dense city centers can provide ...

Are Cities Bad for Mental Health? - US News Health

Researchers have linked urban living with psychotic illnesses like schizophrenia since at least the 1930s.