Background
Common mental health conditions are associated with high levels of disability and recurrence worldwide.Reference Dunn and Goodyer1 Young people are at an increased risk of developing such conditions. Anxiety disorders often first occur during adolescence, and young adulthood is a key risk period for developing depression.Reference Kessler, Amminger, Aguilar-Gaxiola, Alonso, Lee and Ustün2 Neighbourhood social cohesion may mitigate the risk of developing depression or anxiety among young people.3 Evidence from longitudinal and cross-sectional studies suggests that neighbourhood social cohesion may protect against the adverse mental health effects of growing up in poverty, both for children and young peopleReference Kingsbury, Kirkbride, McMartin, Wickham, Weeks and Colman4,Reference Donnelly, McLanahan, Brooks-Gunn, Garfinkel, Wagner and Jacobsen5 and adult populations.Reference Fone, White, Farewell, Kelly, John and Lloyd6–Reference Erdem, Van Lenthe, Prins, Voorham and Burdorf8
Neighbourhood social cohesion can be defined by the presence of social cohesion at a neighbourhood level. Social cohesion can be defined as ‘the extent of connectedness and solidarity among groups in society’ and consists of the absence of latent social conflict (e.g. polarisation, racial/ethnic tensions) and the presence of strong social bonds (e.g. trust, reciprocity), social connection and institutions of conflict management.Reference Kawachi, Berkman, Berkman and Kawachi9 Neighbourhood social cohesion is operationalised at the level of a neighbourhood or community.Reference Johns, Aiello, Cheng, Galea, Koenen and Uddin10 Neighbourhoods can be defined as geographical places that have social and cultural meaning to residents and non-residents alike, and are subdivisions of large places.Reference Duncan and Kawachi11
Although factors of neighbourhood social cohesion, such as inequality,Reference Barnett, Zhang, Johnston and Cerin12 racial and ethnic tensionsReference Benner, Wang, Shen, Boyle, Polk and Cheng13 and a lack of social support,Reference McPherson, Kerr, McGee, Morgan, Cheater and McLean14 are known risk factors for mental health problems, a systematic overview of the potential effect of neighbourhood social cohesion on depression and anxiety in young people is lacking. Reviews to date have either been conducted over 6 years ago, with new research warranting an updated reviewReference Stirling, Toumbourou and Rowland15; studied effects of social cohesion or social capital, but did not include a neighbourhood component;Reference McPherson, Kerr, McGee, Morgan, Cheater and McLean14 or primarily focused on (older) adultsReference Baranyi, Sieber, Cullati, Pearce, Dibben and Courvoisier16,Reference Flores, Fuhr, Bayer, Lescano, Thorogood and Simms17 or adolescents.Reference Visser, Bolt, Finkenauer, Jonker, Weinberg and Stevens18 Moreover, young people's views and priorities have not yet been included in prior reviews on this topic. Although it is still uncommon, including the views of young people with lived experience may help identify implications of results and improve the practical solutions and impact delivered by reviews, by delivering data-driven interpretations from lived experience.Reference Beames, Kikas, O'Gradey-Lee, Gale, Werner-Seidler and Boydell19 Neighbourhood social cohesion can be a new target for interventions to prevent depression and anxiety. To date, the evidence on the effectiveness of prevention in adolescents and young adults is mixed. Evidence suggests that preventative interventions for adolescents and young adults are effective in reducing depression and anxiety symptoms and onset in the short term;Reference Christensen, Pallister, Smale, Hickie and Calear20,Reference Breedvelt, Kandola, Kousoulis, Brouwer, Karyotaki and Bockting21 however, no study has examined the sustainability of the effect for over 12 months, and evidence that interventions can prevent the onset of a depressive episode in young adults is lacking.Reference Breedvelt, Kandola, Kousoulis, Brouwer, Karyotaki and Bockting21 This supports the need for the identification of new targets for prevention interventions.
A comprehensive review that explores the potential of neighbourhood social cohesion for preventing anxiety and depression in adolescents and young adults is needed. This review will explore the following questions:
(a) Etiological: Which elements of neighbourhood social cohesion affect the mental health (depression and anxiety) of adolescents and young people (14–24 years), and to what extent?
(b) Intervention: What is the effectiveness of current interventions aiming to improve neighbourhood social cohesion for preventing depression and/or anxiety in adolescents and young people (14–24 years), and what could future interventions look like?
(c) Young people's perspectives: What are the perspectives of young people toward the elements of neighbourhood social cohesion and related potential interventions that may affect their mental health?
Method
A rapid review was conducted. PubMed; Campbell Collaboration; KSR Evidence; OAIster; OpenGrey; Jisc Library Hub Discover; DH-DATA: Health Administration, Medical Toxicology & Environmental Health (Dialog); and Google were searched from inception until 10 July 2020 (for search strings see Supplementary File 1 available at https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2022.57). The protocol of this review can be found in Supplementary File 2. Included study designs were randomised controlled trials, quasi-experimental studies, longitudinal cohort studies and cross-sectional studies. Studies were included if participants were aged 14–24 years (based on mean age assessment), the study focused on neighbourhood social cohesion, social capital or community cohesion, and the study outcome was depression and anxiety as measured with a validated questionnaire. Studies were excluded if they focused on adolescents and young adults with a primary diagnosis of a long-term health condition (i.e. diabetes or HIV) or externalising conditions such as addictions or non-disorder specific outcome measures (e.g. well-being, resilience, loneliness, self-esteem; see Supplementary File 3 for a Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcomes and Study design table). Peer-reviewed articles were screened by J.J.F.B. and E.S.; full-text inclusion decisions were made by J.J.F.B., Edyta Ryczek and E.S. Extractions were conducted by Edyta Ryczek, with a second author randomly checking 20% of extractions. Covidence (Veritas Health Innovation, Australia; see www.covidence.org) was used for importing studies and removal of all duplicates.
Study results were described via a narrative synthesis with priority on describing study results that would allow for causal inference with, in order of priority meta-analyses, randomised controlled trials, quasi-experimental study designs and longitudinal study designs. Cross-sectional studies were only described if no longitudinal study designs were available.
For the second research aim, we prioritised describing results from the rapid review first. However, if there were no studies that met our inclusion criteria, we set out to provide an overview of what potential interventions that could improve neighbourhood social cohesion could look like.
Risk of bias
Risk of bias in longitudinal studies was assessed with the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Checklist for Case Series.22 Risk of bias in the systematic reviews was assessed with the Risk of Bias Assessment Tool for Systematic Reviews (ROBIS).Reference Whiting, Savović, Higgins, Caldwell, Reeves and Shea23 Cross-sectional studies were assessed with the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Checklist for Cross-Sectional Studies.24
Lived experience workshops
Two consultative workshops with young people were organised and held by Leaders Unlocked (leaders-unlocked.org), to inform the review. First, a workshop with young people was held to inform the search terms and a theoretical conceptual framework of neighbourhood social cohesion. This was because we identified a broad range of definitions and interpretations of neighbourhood social cohesion. We set out to provide a theoretical conceptual framework to give structure to our results and interpretations. Such a framework could also be a useful basis for future research. A unique feature of our proposed conceptual framework is that it includes the views of young people, whereas most theoretical conceptual frameworks to date have not explicitly included the views of people with lived experience.
The first lived experience workshop explored what neighbourhood social cohesion looked like to them. A qualitative thematic analysis was applied to summarise the key factors of neighbourhood social cohesion. A narrative review of definitions on neighbourhood social cohesion and social capital was conducted alongside the workshop, and provided theoretical definitions of neighbourhood social cohesion. Table 1 provides an overview of the seven identified components of neighbourhood social cohesion, their associated definitions and an illustrative quote from young people as to what this meant to them.
The second workshop aimed to inform what future interventions to increase neighbourhood social cohesion may look like. We asked young people about what they felt could increase connection within their community (see Supplementary File 4 for the topic guide). A qualitative thematic analysis and a narrative literature review (separate to the rapid review) were conducted to identify any relevant themes and evidence related to potential interventions that may increase connection. The results of the workshops and literature review are presented in the ‘Future Interventions' section of the results. The workshops were held as consultation events, so no ethics approval was obtained. Verbal consent was sought at the start of the workshop.
Results
After removing duplicates, 2261 title/abstracts were screened and 432 papers were included for full-text review. Forty-two peer-reviewed publications were identified, comprising two systematic reviews, 13 longitudinal studies and 27 cross-sectional studies (see Supplementary File 5 for the PRISMA-P flowchart). No intervention studies were identified (randomised controlled trials) that met our inclusion criteria. Most of the studies were conducted in North America (34 studies), followed by Asia, Australasia and Europe (non-UK) (two studies from each location) and UK (one study). Cities were the most often evaluated type of community/neighbourhood (22 studies). Table 2 provides an overview of the baseline characteristics of the included longitudinal studies (Supplementary File 6 shows baseline characteristics and results of cross-sectional and systematic reviews). We prioritised describing longitudinal results as this provides the most insight into any potential causal link between exposure to cohesion and mental health outcomes. All longitudinal studies were single-arm and non-comparative. The risk of bias across longitudinal studies was moderate to high, as studies often lacked detail on inclusion criteria and baseline characteristics (see Supplementary File 7 for quality assessment ratings of included studies). Still, most studies appeared to have sufficient sample sizes and were based on established longitudinal surveys. As none of the studies included randomisation, it is impossible to rule out that associations could be attributed to unobserved characteristics rather than neighbourhood social cohesion.Reference Donnelly, McLanahan, Brooks-Gunn, Garfinkel, Wagner and Jacobsen5
CES-D, Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale; MDD, major depressive disorder; DISC 4, Depression Intensity Scale Circles; BSI, Brief Symptom Inventory; CDI, Children's Depression Inventory; S-MFQ, Short Moods and Feelings Questionnaire.
Factors of neighbourhood social cohesion
Table 1 provides the theoretical conceptual framework of neighbourhood social cohesion. Seven neighbourhood social cohesion factors were identified from our thematic analysis: relationships, safety, belonging, social support, shared values, the (built) environment, and influence and social participation. An overview of definitions and illustrative quotes is further provided.
The study results in Table 3 show that there is evidence to support that factors of neighbourhood social cohesion are associated with mental health symptoms. Table 3 provides an overview of the neighbourhood social cohesion factor as identified in the theoretical conceptual framework, how it is measured, and the effect of exposure to this factor on depression and anxiety in young people. It appears that studies most consistently show that communities that have the presence of positive relationships and a lack of latent social conflict (i.e. safety) were most strongly associated with mental health symptoms. The below paragraphs describe which neighbourhood social cohesion factors were associated with symptoms of depression and anxiety.
Relationships, social support, influence and belonging
Two studies found that increased levels of positive social relationships in the community were associated with reduced levels of depression at follow-up. Solmi et alReference Solmi, Colman, Weeks, Lewis and Kirkbride41 found that low levels of neighbourhood interaction (positive relationships) and social support (including trust) reported by parents of children at 13 years of age were associated with an increased risk of depressive symptoms at 18 years of age. Children exposed to high neighbourhood collective efficacy (cooperative behaviour, shared values, close relationships and social control) experienced lower depression and anxiety symptoms at 15 years of age compared with adolescents growing up in a low collective efficacy neighbourhood.Reference Donnelly, McLanahan, Brooks-Gunn, Garfinkel, Wagner and Jacobsen5
Relationships and safety
Five studies found evidence for the effects of positive relationships, social support and a lack of latent social conflict (i.e. safety) on mental health. Wu et alReference Wu, Xie, Chou, Palmer, Gallaher and Johnson45 studied neighbourhood social cohesion, family capital and financial capital among 5164 adolescents. Factors of neighbourhood safety and social support (i.e. whether neighbours care about other neighbours) were associated with lower levels of depressive symptoms at 3-year follow-up. Similarly, Estrada-Martínez et alReference Estrada-Martínez, Caldwell, Bauermeister and Zimmerman37 found that increased fear of violence and lower levels of trust and social support were associated with higher depressive symptoms over time. The presence of a positive role model, alongside safety, social support and positive relationships, was also associated with reduced depressive symptoms in adolescents in a longitudinal cohort study in Canada.Reference Abada, Hou and Ram31
Influence and participation
Social and political participation at the community level includes taking part in locally organised activities such as community groups and sports, as well as activism to affect local and national policy issues.Reference Bryk and Driscoll48 Of all extracurricular or community participation for adolescents, engaging in group sports seems to be the only activity that has thus far been associated with reduced depressive symptoms. Viau et alReference Viau, Denault and Poulin42 studied whether participation in cultural, sporting (individual and team) and civic activities, as well as the extent thereof (support from activity leaders, social integration), between ages 14 and 17 years was associated with reduced depressive symptoms at age 18 years in adolescents. Only in the team sports activity group was an association found: the more boys felt integrated into the community peer group (social support), the longer they engaged in activities and the fewer depressive symptoms they reported. Team sports were also available for girls, but there was a lower uptake. Potentially, team sports can be made more attractive, and alternative forms of active participation might be more beneficial for girls.Reference Viau, Denault and Poulin42
Neighbourhood safety
The absence of latent social conflict comprises whether communities are safe and there is little violence.Reference Kawachi, Berkman, Berkman and Kawachi9 Only one study evaluated this construct separately, and found that lower levels of perceived safety at age 13 years were associated with higher depressive symptoms at age 18 years.Reference Solmi, Colman, Weeks, Lewis and Kirkbride41
Violence
Young people may be exposed directly to violence in the community, as well as indirectly through parental stress from perceived social disorder.Reference Fowler, Tompsett, Braciszewski, Jacques-Tiura and Baltes49 Wu et alReference Wu, Xie, Chou, Palmer, Gallaher and Johnson45 noted an indirect effect of violence on mental health symptoms, namely living in safety relieves parents from stressors, allowing them to spend more time with their children and focus on the child.Reference Wu, Xie, Chou, Palmer, Gallaher and Johnson45
Direct exposure to violence may also be associated with the occurrence of depression, although the evidence is mixed for adolescents and young adults. On the one hand, Cerdá et alReference Cerdá, Tracy, Sánchez and Galea33 found that among adolescents, violent victimisation and witnessing violence were not associated with an increase in depressive symptoms. On the other hand, self-reported victimisation based on sexual orientation or sexual minority and harassment was associated with depressive symptoms in LGBTQ adolescents and young adults.Reference Burton, Marshal, Chisolm, Sucato and Friedman47,Reference Hall50 Similarly, perceived racial discrimination in the neighbourhood has been associated with increased symptoms of depression in two longitudinal studies among adolescentsReference Basáñez, Unger, Soto, Crano and Baezconde-Garbanati32 and young adults.Reference Estrada-Martínez, Caldwell, Bauermeister and Zimmerman37
The (built) environment
Included studies primarily evaluated neighbourhood racial composition as an environmental factor. There was no evidence to suggest that neighbourhood composition was associated with depressive symptoms in two longitudinal surveys.Reference Basáñez, Unger, Soto, Crano and Baezconde-Garbanati32,Reference Hurd, Sellers, Cogburn, Butler-Barnes and Zimmerman39 One longitudinal study did suggest that neighbourhood composition may only be affecting immigrants in contrast to non-immigrants.Reference Lee and Liechty40 Lee and Liechty found that, among 2678 Hispanic youth, Latin American immigrant density was associated with lower odds of depression for immigrants, but this association was not found for non-immigrant Latin American adolescents.Reference Lee and Liechty40 In contrast, a longitudinal study among Canadian adolescents found that visible minority youth living in areas with a high concentration of minorities had higher symptoms of depression compared with visible minority youth living in largely White neighbourhoods.Reference Abada, Hou and Ram31 As the evidence is mixed in this area, further research is needed to unravel drivers for increased risk of depressive symptoms.
Living in large cities did not seem to affect the development of depressive symptoms in one longitudinal study among Canadian adolescents.Reference Abada, Hou and Ram31 However, urbanisation may even be protective for some: a longitudinal study in the USA found that that decreases in urbanisation were associated with higher depressive symptoms for sexual minority youth.Reference Everett46
To summarise, neighbourhood factors, including positive relationships and a lack of social conflict and violence, are associated with decreased depressive symptoms, and in one case, symptoms of anxiety. The environmental factors that were studied (neighbourhood composition and urbanicity) show mixed effects. It appears urbanisation could be protective for sexual minority youth, although further research is needed.
Future interventions
No intervention studies that met our inclusion criteria were identified for the rapid review. To inform future interventions and what they could look like, we provide an overview of future interventions to increase neighbourhood social cohesion. These interventions are suggested based on lived experience workshops and a narrative literature review. An overview of the results of the lived experience workshops can be found in Supplemental File 8, and we provide quotes from the workshops.
Volunteering
One potential avenue to improve neighbourhood social cohesion is increasing community activity in the form of community groups or volunteering. For instance, OhmerReference Ohmer51 found that volunteering in community groups organised through small non-profit organisations (i.e. neighbourhood beautification, crime prevention and leadership development) was associated with an increased sense of community, self-efficacy and community efficacy for people taking part in the groups.Reference Ohmer51 Large-scale national volunteering programmes (i.e. National Citizen Service (NCS), England) for adolescents and young adults (aged 15–17 years) have also found that community involvement and social cohesion increased compared with control groups (participants who expressed interest in taking part in a NCS intervention but did not participate). A quasi-experimental study to evaluate the effects of the NCS (6-week intervention comprising community awareness and planning and delivery of a social action project in the local community) found that local community involvement increased, as did feelings of cohesion versus control. Although the effects on mental health were not measured with a validated measure of depression or anxiety to ascertain its potential preventive effects, a self-report item of ‘% who did not feel anxious at all yesterday’ and increased personal resilience were observed among young people taking part in the NCS (n = 1608) compared with the matched control group (n = 2041) at 3- to 5-month follow-up.Reference Cameron, Stannard, Leckey, Hale and Di Antonio52 In the workshops, adolescents and young adults also highlighted how volunteering can help provide a sense of cohesion:
‘Joining the community and getting involved, if we got people to volunteer … get them to fundraise … volunteering in the community is a corner stone to getting to know people and getting sociable.’
Arts, creativity and culture
Arts and culture may increase positive relationships and participation in neighbourhood activities. Generally, the more arts and cultural activities available in a community, the more participation in community cultural activities can be observed.Reference Jeannotte53 Using arts as a community intervention to improve adolescent and young adult mental health may be promising, although most evidence is qualitative.Reference Bungay and Vella-Burrows54 For example, Fanian et alReference Fanian, Young, Mantla, Daniels and Chatwood55 studied creative arts projects where five workshops with five to six youth were held to explore community issues and find solutions through the arts (music and film). Initial qualitative reports suggest that the groups helped build positive relationships and empowerment to influence change. From our workshops, the adolescents and young adults felt that having community spaces that provide activity groups would improve connection and a sense of belonging. Finding creative ways to bring these arts and culture groups to the community was important:
‘I think it was a charity that had a minibus that had equipment for people to write music … they had a studio … even if we can't get the funding to create a whole new building, how we can try and find ways to bring different activities for people to get involved in within the community.’
Sport groups
Participating in organised group sports activities can be a helpful pathway to form positive networks with peers and adults.Reference Langbein and Bess56 Most studies evaluating sports have been conducted in a school rather than neighbourhood context. Langbein and Bess (2002) found that organised sports can help to reduce school disturbances, highlighting that is some preliminary evidence to suggest that organised sports may be effective in this setting to decrease social conflict, by creating the opportunity for repeated social interaction to help reinforce social norms and reduce the development of conflict.Reference Langbein and Bess56
‘A big park … there's a lot of cohesion with different people doing different sports, being able to share it.’
Online spaces
Online platforms or networks can be another avenue to foster (neighbourhood) social cohesion, especially with the COVID-19 pandemic limiting opportunities to meet face to face. Some preliminary qualitative evidence suggests that using social media sites can be helpful to facilitate community interaction and increase participation in (offline) sports activities.Reference Braumüller57 To build successful engagement, it has been suggested that such platforms are best created bottom-up (by the community) and rely on community members to maintain and promote the platform to enhance engagement from the community.Reference Renyi, Rombach, Teuteberg and Kunze58 In the workshops, adolescents and young people also suggested that online community groups on Facebook and WhatsApp could increase social support in the neighbourhood through offering social support and increased social interaction:
‘A really big Facebook group page, everyday everyone's putting on “who's lost this” … being really honest with each other.’
Green space
Increasing green space may provide more opportunities to build relationships with neighbours, in turn increasing neighbourhood social cohesion. For adolescents and young adults (aged 13–19 years), a rapid review observed that adding more natural elements and opportunities for play in outdoor spaces was associated with increased social connectedness.Reference Wray, Martin, Ostermeier, Medeiros, Little and Reilly59 A systematic review looking at the fear of crime in urban green spaces found that vandalised or run-down parks are associated with higher levels of crime, and that this fear of crime in poorly maintained green spaces disproportionately affects women, girls and ethnic minorities in terms of their mobility and feelings of safety.Reference Sreetheran and van den Bosch60 In the workshops, adolescents and young people emphasised the opportunity of parks for exposure to, and interaction with, different communities and generations:
‘A big park … centre of the community, it's got a children's play area and a big field with football goalposts and a nice hill which is nice to sit on … the fact that these green spaces can be used by multiple different people … that park has been the centre of the community since it was a field in the 60s.’
Neighbourhood regeneration programmes
Neighbourhood regeneration programmes are frequently seen as an opportunity to improve the built environment, which can result in improved social benefits.Reference White, Greene, Farewell, Dunstan, Rodgers and Lyons61 Overall, evidence suggests that changes in the built environment via neighbourhood regeneration programmes can be beneficial for mental health in adults. For example, in Communities First, a neighbourhood intervention across deprived neighbourhoods in Wales, White et alReference White, Greene, Farewell, Dunstan, Rodgers and Lyons61 observed a significant reduction in mental health symptoms in the regeneration intervention group (composed mostly of building new community facilities) compared with the propensity-score-matched control group. Further research on this programme suggests that the effect on mental health occurred through increased neighbourhood quality and reduced disorder,Reference Greene, Fone, Farewell, Rodgers, Paranjothy and Carter62 which might be valuable target points for future interventions. Alongside parks and spaces, structural elements such as transportation should also be considered for neighbourhood social cohesion. Hart and ParkhurstReference Hart and Parkhurst63 observed that where streets had higher volumes of motor traffic, residents reported fewer friends and acquaintances on the street. In the workshops, it was emphasised that adolescents and young people would be keen to have a say in future developments; for example, by joining council meetings:
‘To focus on the people and get people involved so they themselves feel they are valued … more community representatives that can get involved in council meetings … more responsibility and [a] more connected community.’
Psychosocial interventions
Community groups may increase neighbourhood social cohesion by creating repeated opportunities to connect and share experiences. For example, a quasi-experimental study in Rwanda studied the effects of a group intervention aiming to increase social capital (measuring cognitive social capital), support (receiving financial, instrumental or emotional support) and civic participation (joining in addressing local issues and meetings, engaging with selecting local leadership) in an adult population. It found that, among 200 adults, the intervention had a positive effect on both mental health and civic participation compared with a matched control group, but not on cognitive social capital and support over a 15-month follow-up.Reference Verduin, Smid, Wind and Scholte64 Moreover, community-based groups aimed at empowering and teaching life skills to young women in India were associated with reduced depressive and anxiety symptoms and a shift in community attitudes toward violence against women and girls.Reference Andrew, Krutikova, Smarrelli, Verma, Gautam and Verma65 Considering gender dynamics when developing community group interventions for social capital is important, as participation in groups can reinforce gender inequality with negative consequences for the mental health of women.Reference Osborne, Baum and Ziersch66 In the workshops, it was highlighted that a community centre to host community groups would be beneficial, as it offered different integrations between people who would not usually connect. Particularly, offering an area like a café might offer opportunities for connection between community groups:
‘What I liked about it is that you get all these different people, you had a group for people with mental health difficulties, a group for people with disabilities … you did see some integration of people that don't usually meet each other.’
Adverse effects
Neighbourhood social cohesion may also have adverse effects. For example, people who move into a community may be excluded if the existing social networks are highly cohesive.Reference Portes67 Second, high levels of social control and observation may also limit young people's exploration and mobilityReference Portes67 and contribute toward anxiety. Indeed, adolescents in London indicated that they prefer some level of social control (i.e. willingness of neighbours to intervene with challenges) and proximity of caregivers (indirect observation), but not direct control and observation from caregivers or parents.Reference Bornat and Shaw28 This means that when designing interventions, the current level of social cohesiveness of a neighbourhood should be considered, especially levels of social control and observation.
Discussion
Summary of evidence
We set out to study which elements of neighbourhood social cohesion may be preventive for depression and anxiety in adolescents and young adults, whether any interventions that increase cohesion can be effective and what the views of young people were on increasing neighbourhood social connection and what future interventions may look like. In consultation with young people, we developed a conceptual theoretical framework on the factors that comprise neighbourhood social cohesion. We identified seven factors, namely relationships, safety, belonging, social support, shared values, the (built) environment and influence.
We then explored whether neighbourhood social cohesion factors were associated with depression and anxiety in adolescence and young adulthood. Positive relationships, social support, the ability to enforce social norms, feeling safe, little nuisance and antisocial behaviour, and trusting others in the neighbourhood were associated with fewer symptoms of depression and anxiety in adolescents and young adults.Reference Abada, Hou and Ram31,Reference Estrada-Martínez, Caldwell, Bauermeister and Zimmerman37,Reference Hurd, Sellers, Cogburn, Butler-Barnes and Zimmerman39,Reference Solmi, Colman, Weeks, Lewis and Kirkbride41,Reference Wu, Xie, Chou, Palmer, Gallaher and Johnson45 Neighbourhood violence, which may include victimisation and harassment, was also associated with more depressive and anxiety symptoms in a number of longitudinal studies and systematic reviews included in this review.Reference Wu, Xie, Chou, Palmer, Gallaher and Johnson45,Reference Hall50,Reference Perry, Tabb and Mendenhall68 Thus, the ability to change these factors may all be potential target points for interventions that reduce the risk of developing depression and anxiety.
Next, we studied whether there is evidence for interventions aiming to increase neighbourhood social cohesion and what future interventions could look like. We found no experimental or quasi-experimental studies evaluating the preventive effect of neighbourhood social cohesion interventions on depression and anxiety in adolescents and young adults. As such, there is inconclusive evidence of an effect of interventions to prevent depression and anxiety. However, we describe several interventions that target neighbourhood social cohesion factors that were informed by young people, which can be used for future research. These include creating safe and inclusive community centres, accessible outdoor spaces, community groups and activities that foster engagement, and increasing the connection between online and offline activities in order to enhance further cohesion.
Strengths
This is the first rapid review available on neighbourhood social cohesion for preventing depression and anxiety in adolescents and young people. The findings offer a building block for future research. We developed a theoretical framework. We identified the factors of neighbourhood social cohesion for which there is most evidence for a potential preventative effect. Then, we identified future intervention strategies that target the factors of neighbourhood social cohesion, which can be utilised for future research.
Limitations
This review also has several limitations. First, only one researcher conducted the screening and extractions, with a second researcher cross-checking 20% of their work database for peer-reviewed papers (PubMed), which may have limited the results we identified. However, we supplemented this by searching reference lists of included papers and systematic reviews. We also conducted a thorough search of grey literature databases and an online search of interventions. We were furthermore unable to pool all of the data to conduct a meta-analysis, because of the heterogeneity of studies and reporting of study results.
Future research
Improving opportunity for causal inference
Several reflections regarding the overall state of the literature can also be made. A key observation of research on neighbourhood social cohesion is the lack of intervention studies. As also evidenced by this review, most studies studying the effect of neighbourhood factors on health use cross-sectional designs and are at high risk of bias.Reference Duncan and Kawachi11 This limits causal inference in studies of neighbourhoods and mental health.Reference Duncan and Kawachi11 Future research should consider moving away from correlational studies to methods allowing for more causal inference, including longitudinal, change-on-change analytical, quasi-experimental and experimental study designs.
Improving measurement and analysis
The measurement tools used in the review studies were diverse: five of the longitudinal studies developed questionnairesReference Abada, Hou and Ram31,Reference Fredricks and Eccles36,Reference Lee and Liechty40,Reference Solmi, Colman, Weeks, Lewis and Kirkbride41,Reference Wu, Xie, Chou, Palmer, Gallaher and Johnson45 and four used modified scales from previous studies.Reference Donnelly, McLanahan, Brooks-Gunn, Garfinkel, Wagner and Jacobsen5,Reference Cerdá, Tracy, Sánchez and Galea33,Reference Estrada-Martínez, Caldwell, Bauermeister and Zimmerman37,Reference Viau, Denault and Poulin42 Most studies combined factors into one questionnaire. By combining multiple constructs into one tool, it is difficult to disentangle exact factors (i.e. safety, social support) of neighbourhood social cohesion and the relative effects it might have on mental health. We propose further work on individual measurement and analysis of the neighbourhood social cohesion factors identified in this review, rather than using composite measures of cohesion. This includes a separate search of elements of cohesion as identified by our theoretical framework, rather than searching only on neighbourhood social cohesion. This will allow researchers to understand more about the relative contribution of separate factors of neighbourhood cohesion and their potential interactions over time.
Neighbourhood cohesion is a construct that is best conceptualised at the community level. However, in practice, it is often measured and modelled at an individual level. Measuring a community construct at an individual level may introduce bias, especially in studies of depression. Spurious relations may arise if the informant with depression is the same as the informant on positive relationships or the perception of safety. Individual characteristics, such as negative mood or a tendency to give extreme answers, may bias associations (shared method variance bias). Improving our ability to measure neighbourhood social cohesion at a community level and making data-sets available that have community-level indicators for social cohesion are both needed in future research.
System dynamics modelling can be a future avenue to distinguish both individual- and community-level contributions of neighbourhood social cohesion to mental health. In system dynamics modelling, individual, social and societal factors (and their interactions over time) can be mapped and investigated. Building a complex system model of neighbourhood social cohesion offers an opportunity to test and identify potential targets and the magnitude of the effect of interventions on a mental health system as a whole (for instance, on school drop-out rates and access to mental healthcare).
Improving generalisability
In our review, most studies in were conducted in North America. Notably, we did not identify a single study in a low- or middle-income country. It would be beneficial to see replications of the neighbourhood social cohesion factors in other areas. Anxiety outcome measures were also not included as frequently compared with depression outcome measurement tools: they were only reported in two out of 13 studies. We recommend further effort into studying these underresearched areas and groups, decreasing the risk of bias by improved reporting of baseline characteristics.
Implications for clinical practice and policy
For clinical practice, these results suggest that clinicians should not only focus on the individual and family, but also consider interventions that enhance connections within the neighbourhood and actively seek existing activities in the neighbourhood for signposting. In policy development, it is important that future interventions involve co-production,Reference Osborne, Baum and Ziersch66 and consideration is given to ensure inclusivity and accessibility, with differential effects on gender, disability and ethnicity considered.
To conclude, broadening current practice and research to include factors of neighbourhood social cohesion as identified in this review, has the potential to improve future prevention and research in depression and anxiety prevention in young people. Several approaches should be further explored and implemented, such as creating safe and attractive community centres, accessible and safe outdoor spaces, organising community activity groups and supporting engagement with online platforms to facilitate connections offline. In addition, clinicians must consider the community context alongside the individual and family context in their practice. Future interventions may benefit from the wide range of options available for increasing neighbourhood social cohesion, tailored to the neighbourhood and developed in collaboration with young people.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2022.57.
Data availability
The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author, J.J.F.B., upon request.
Acknowledgements
We would like to acknowledge Leaders Unlocked (http://leaders-unlocked.org/) and the young people who took part in this research. We also acknowledge Kleijnen Systematic Reviews for supporting with the extractions and searches for this review.
Author contributions
J.J.F.B. conceptualised the research, obtained funding for the proposal and prepared the first draft. C.L.B. contributed to the funding application and reviewed several drafts. H.T. contributed to the report writing and tables. C.N., I.E., C.L.B. and E.S. contributed to an insight analysis workshop, which was held with Leaders Unlocked and our young people, to conceptualise the findings and results. E.S. contributed to drafting the manuscript and provided support with inclusion and extraction of studies. S.G. reviewed drafts and contributed to reviewing the manuscript.
Funding
This work was funded by the Wellcome Trust's Mental Health Priority Area as part of their Active Ingredients Commission.
Declaration of interest
None.
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