Urban Science (Oct 2024)

The Interplay Between the Built Environment, Health, and Well-Being—A Scoping Review

  • Elham Andalib,
  • Alenka Temeljotov-Salaj,
  • Martin Steinert,
  • Agnar Johansen,
  • Pasi Aalto,
  • Jardar Lohne

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci8040184
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
p. 184

Abstract

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Objective: This scoping review aims to investigate the complex interplay between the built environment, health, and well-being and to provide a comprehensive overview of the knowledge needed for crucial health and well-being enhancement in cities. Method: A scoping review method has been chosen using four databases. The first sample was reduced from 2819 papers to 71 papers by implementing exclusion criteria, snowballing, and direct searches to find a relevant final sample. Results: Built environmental elements such as the neighborhood, urban architecture, activities, public spaces, greenery, lights, safety, aesthetics, and amenities were identified to be impactful on health and well-being outcomes. The two-way association of each environmental factor and its criteria with specific types of health and well-being issues such as cancer, cardiovascular diseases, stress, etc. was determined to identify solutions and ways for improvement. Conclusions: This scoping review provides a comprehensive overview of the intricate interplay between the built environment, health, and well-being. By synthesizing existing knowledge of the built environmental factors, it explores the basis for evidence-based strategies to enhance health and well-being. By illuminating theoretical knowledge of the built environment on health and well-being, our findings will provide a deeper foundation of sources and practical insights for related fields.

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