TY - JOUR
T1 - Debate: Urban versus rural environments – which is better for mental health?
T2 - The one good thing about a small town…
AU - Wiers, Reinout W.
AU - Urban Mental Health Researchers
AU - Bozhar, Hanan
AU - Bruining, Hilgo
AU - Dalege, Jonas
AU - De Mooij, Brechtje
AU - Finnemann, Adam
AU - Freichel, René
AU - Korosi, Aniko
AU - Larsen, Helle
AU - Lees, Michael
AU - Leijten, Patty
AU - Lucassen, Paul J.
AU - Mc'Kearny, Patrick
AU - Overbeek, Geertjan
AU - de Rooij, Susanne R.
AU - Roseboom, Tessa
AU - Smit, Eline
AU - Van der Veen, Rixt
AU - van Holst, Ruth
AU - Van der Spek, Nadia
AU - Veer, Ilya
AU - Wichers, Rob
AU - Marroun, Hanan El
AU - Bockting, Claudi
AU - Krugers, Harm
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Child and Adolescent Mental Health published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.
PY - 2025/3/21
Y1 - 2025/3/21
N2 - Urban environments are related to higher prevalences of common mental disorders (addictions, anxieties and mood disorders) in adults. The mechanisms underlying this relationship are less clear. Cities function as a magnet, related to economic and educational opportunities, but are also related to urban stress and low well-being. Urban areas have larger inequalities, and people in deprived areas are at enhanced risk for mental health problems, which have been related both to environmental factors like pollution and to perceptions of the (social) environment, including perceived safety and social support. The interactions of vulnerability factors at different levels of description (e.g., within-person stress vulnerability vs. neighborhood stressors) can be considered a complex system. We here discuss what is known about growing up in an urban versus rural environment, with the aim to identify target points for mental health-related interventions in youth. We summarize this for three broad developmental periods: early life (first 1000 days), childhood, and adolescence into young adulthood, with implications for interventions.
AB - Urban environments are related to higher prevalences of common mental disorders (addictions, anxieties and mood disorders) in adults. The mechanisms underlying this relationship are less clear. Cities function as a magnet, related to economic and educational opportunities, but are also related to urban stress and low well-being. Urban areas have larger inequalities, and people in deprived areas are at enhanced risk for mental health problems, which have been related both to environmental factors like pollution and to perceptions of the (social) environment, including perceived safety and social support. The interactions of vulnerability factors at different levels of description (e.g., within-person stress vulnerability vs. neighborhood stressors) can be considered a complex system. We here discuss what is known about growing up in an urban versus rural environment, with the aim to identify target points for mental health-related interventions in youth. We summarize this for three broad developmental periods: early life (first 1000 days), childhood, and adolescence into young adulthood, with implications for interventions.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105000865036&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/camh.12771
DO - 10.1111/camh.12771
M3 - Comment/Letter to the editor
C2 - 40114515
AN - SCOPUS:105000865036
SN - 1475-357X
JO - Child and Adolescent Mental Health
JF - Child and Adolescent Mental Health
ER -