Building a Culture of Health Through the Built Environment: Impact of a Cluster Randomized Trial Remediating Vacant and Abandoned Property on Health Mindsets
Katherine P. Theall, Jasmine Wallace, Amber Tucker, Kim Wu, Brigham Walker, Jeanette Gustat, Michelle Kondo, Christopher Morrison, Casius Pealer, Charles C. Branas, Lisa Richardson

TL;DR
Improving vacant and abandoned properties can enhance community health mindsets, with effects varying based on the type of remediation and neighborhood segregation.
Contribution
This study demonstrates that remediating vacant and abandoned properties can influence health-related mindsets and social capital in deprived areas.
Findings
Treating both vacant lots and abandoned homes increased sense of community by 83%.
Treating only vacant lots reduced perceived neighborhood disorder and worry about violence.
Racial and income segregation moderated the effects of remediation on health mindsets.
Abstract
Changing built environment conditions to impact health mindsets and health equity may be a promising target for public health interventions. The present study was a cluster randomized controlled trial to test the impact of remediating vacant and abandoned properties on factors related to health mindset—including well-being, health interconnectedness, social capital markers, neighborhood disorder and worry—as well as direct and indirect violence experiences and the moderating role of racial and income segregation on outcomes. A residential cohort of 405 participants from 194 randomly assigned geographic clusters were surveyed over five waves from 2019 to 2023. Compared to clusters with no treatment, participants in clusters where both vacant lots and abandoned homes were treated experienced significant increases in sense of community (83%, 95% CI=71 to 96%, p=0.01). Among participants in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth disparities and outcomes · Urban Green Space and Health · Homelessness and Social Issues
