Abstract

This systematic review assesses the quality of the evidence across studies on the effect of environmental noise (road traffic noise, aircraft noise, railway noise, wind-turbine noise) on quality of life, wellbeing and mental health. Quantitative studies of noise effects on children and adults published from January 2005 up to October 2015 were reviewed. A total of 29 papers were identified. 90% of the papers were of cross-sectional design, with fewer studies of longitudinal or intervention design. Outcomes included depression and anxiety, medication use and childhood emotional problems. The quality of the evidence across the studies for each individual noise source was assessed using an adaptation of the GRADE methodology. Overall, given the predominance of cross-sectional studies, most evidence was rated as very low quality, with evidence of effects only being observed for some noise sources and outcomes. These ratings reflect inconsistent findings across studies, the small number of studies and a lack of methodological robustness within some domains. Overall, there are few studies of clinically significant mental health outcomes; few studies of railway noise exposure; and studies of large samples are needed. The lack of evidence for noise effects across studies for many of the quality of life, wellbeing and mental health domains examined does not necessarily mean that there are no effects: rather, that they have not yet been studied robustly for different noise sources.

Highlights

  • This paper is a systematic review of evidence for effects of environmental noise on quality of life, wellbeing and mental health

  • The first was Belojevic et al, 2012 [17] which was co-authored by one of the reviewers one of the reviewers and confirmed as relevant to our review: this paper was missed as the paper and confirmed as relevant to our review: this paper was missed as the paper title refers to ‘executive title refers to ‘executive functioning’ and includes mental health and wellbeing outcomes

  • We identified 17 studies of associations of environmental noise on self-reported quality of life: 14 studies were of adult populations [19–32]: and three studies were of child populations [33–35]

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Summary

Introduction

This paper is a systematic review of evidence for effects of environmental noise on quality of life, wellbeing and mental health. This paper is the sister paper to the previously published evidence review on the effects of environmental noise on cognition [1]. Both reviews were undertaken at the same time, using the same methodology, to inform the World Health Organization’s revision of their Guidelines for Community Noise [2]. The existing WHO guidelines cover exposure in both home and school environments: both contexts that have been the focus of studies on noise effects on mental health in children and adult populations. Public Health 2018, 15, 2400; doi:10.3390/ijerph15112400 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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