Understanding Your Report ========================== Understanding Your Health Report --------------------------------- Your Environmental Health Score ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The overall score (from **A** to **E**) evaluates air quality around your address and access to healthcare infrastructure. .. image:: _static/images/report/health/global-score.png :alt: Global Health Score :align: center Letter Interpretation ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - **A**: Excellent quality - Very healthy air, full WHO compliance - **B**: Good quality - Healthy air most of the time, few rare exceedances - **C**: Average quality - Moderate pollution episodes - **D**: Poor quality - Regular pollution, vigilance required - **E**: Bad quality - Frequent pollution, health risk Page 1: Air Quality Overview ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Key Indicators ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/health/nb-pollution-days.png :alt: pollution days :align: center This number tells you how many days the air quality exceeded World Health Organization (WHO) safety recommendations. Two values are shown: - **This year**: Current situation (last 365 days) - **5-year average**: Historical reference (last 5 years) Comparing these two helps you see if air quality is improving or getting worse over time. Charts ^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/health/charts.png :alt: Pollution charts :align: center **Daily Evolution Chart** This chart shows how air quality varies day by day throughout the year. - **Red line**: WHO safety threshold - **Above the line** = Concerning pollution levels - **Below the line** = Good air quality - The higher the curve peaks, the higher the pollution **How to read it:** - A stable, low curve means consistently good air - Upward spikes indicate pollution episodes (often related to weather conditions or traffic patterns) **Monthly Histogram** This chart breaks down polluted days (above WHO threshold) month by month. - Colors range from **green** (few polluted days) to **red** (many polluted days) - Helps identify critical periods (for example, winter months often show more pollution due to heating) Page 2: Detailed Analysis and Healthcare Infrastructure ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Two Types of Exposure ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Pollution Peaks (Short-term Exposure) '''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' .. image:: _static/images/report/health/pollution-peaks.png :alt: Pollution Peaks Score :align: center Measures the intensity of the **worst days** of pollution, over the last year. - **Who should pay attention?** People with asthma, allergies, respiratory diseases, elderly individuals... - **Health impact:** Risk of acute symptoms during pollution episodes (breathing difficulties, heart strain) - **What a poor score means:** A **D** or **E** score indicates frequent or intense pollution peaks. During these periods, consider limiting outdoor activities. Long-term Exposure '''''''''''''''''' .. image:: _static/images/report/health/long-term-exposure.png :alt: Long-term Exposure Score :align: center Measures **average daily** pollution levels, over the last year. - **Who should pay attention?** Everyone - this affects long-term health - **Health impact:** Cumulative effects over months and years (increased risk of cardiovascular disease, chronic respiratory conditions, and certain cancers) - **What a poor score means:** A **D** or **E** score suggests persistent pollution, which may have long-term health impacts. Understanding Your Scores Together ''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' **Example 1** - Score **A** in "Long-term Exposure" + Score **D** in "Peaks" - **Meaning:** Air is generally good, BUT there are some intense pollution episodes - **Action:** Monitor air quality alerts and adjust outdoor activities during peak days **Example 2** - Score **D** in "Long-term Exposure" + Score **A** in "Peaks" - **Meaning:** Moderate but constant pollution without extreme episodes - **Action:** Consider long-term health implications, especially for vulnerable family members 5-Year Evolution Chart ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/health/health-score-evolution.png :alt: 5-year Score Evolution Chart :align: center Shows your location's air quality trend over time. - Colored bars represent the overall score **per quarter** since 2020 - **Green trend** (improving grades) = Air quality getting better - **Red trend** (declining grades) = Air quality deteriorating - Helps you understand whether conditions are likely to improve or worsen Access to Healthcare ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/health/nearest-hospital.png :alt: Nearest Hospital :align: center Distance in km (measured in a straight line, as the crow flies) - Search radius: 100 km - Provides context for healthcare accessibility at your location ---- Understanding Your Transportation Report ----------------------------------------- Your Overall Accessibility Score ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The overall score (from **A** to **E**) evaluates how well connected your address is to transportation options - both for long-distance travel and daily local mobility. .. image:: _static/images/report/transportation/global-score.png :alt: Global Score :align: center Letter Interpretation ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - **A**: Excellent - Well-connected to all transport types - **B**: Good - Good access to most transport options - **C**: Average - Moderate connectivity - **D**: Limited - Some transport gaps - **E**: Poor - Limited transportation access Page 1: Long-Distance Accessibility ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ What is Accessibility? ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Accessibility measures how easily you can reach major transportation hubs for long-distance travel: train stations, airports, and highway networks. Your Accessibility Sub-Score ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/transportation/accessibility-score.png :alt: Accessibility Score :align: center This score considers: - Proximity to train stations - Proximity to airports - Access to highway networks *Why it matters:* - **For commuters:** Easy access to regional/national transport - **For travelers:** Convenient long-distance travel options - **For emergencies:** Quick access to major transport routes Key Indicators ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/transportation/distance-railway-station.png :alt: Distance to nearest railway station :align: center Distance in km (measured in a straight line) - Important for: Regional commuting, intercity travel - What's considered good: Under 5 km .. image:: _static/images/report/transportation/distance-airport.png :alt: Distance to nearest airport :align: center Distance in km (measured in a straight line) - Important for: International/domestic air travel - Note: Actual travel time may vary due to traffic and road networks Accessibility Map ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/transportation/accessibility-map.png :alt: Accessibility Map :align: center The map shows major transport infrastructure within 50 km: - **Your location** (red marker) - **Train stations** (blue markers) - **Airports** (darker blue markers) - **Highways** (purple lines) Page 2: Local Ecomobility ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ What is Ecomobility? ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Ecomobility measures access to sustainable, eco-friendly local transportation: public transport (buses, metro) and cycling infrastructure. Your Ecomobility Sub-Score ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/transportation/ecomobility-score.png :alt: Ecomobility Score :align: center This score considers: - Public transport availability (buses, metro) - Cycling infrastructure - Walkability to transport stops *Why it matters:* - **Environmental impact:** Lower carbon footprint - **Daily convenience:** Easy car-free living - **Health:** More active transport options - **Cost savings:** Reduced need for private vehicle Key Indicators ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/transportation/nb-bus-lines.png :alt: Number of Bus Lines Within 1 km :align: center Number of distinct bus lines accessible from your location - Shows diversity of public transport routes - More lines = more destinations accessible - What's considered good: 5+ bus lines .. image:: _static/images/report/transportation/distance-cycle-track.png :alt: Distance to Nearest Cycle Track :align: center Distance in meters (measured in a straight line) - Important for: Safe cycling - What's considered good: Under 500 meters Ecomobility Map ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/transportation/ecomobility-map.png :alt: Eco-mobility map :align: center The map shows local sustainable transport options: - **Your location** (red marker) - **Bus lines** (colored lines, one color per line) - **Bus stops** (grey markers) - **Metro lines** (if available, colored lines) - **Metro stations** (if available, orange markers) - **Cycle tracks** (green lines) **How to read the map:** - Dense networks = better connectivity - Multiple line colors = diverse route options - Green coverage = good cycling infrastructure Understanding Your Scores Together ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ **Example 1: Score A in Accessibility + Score C in Ecomobility** - **Meaning:** Great for long-distance travel, but limited daily sustainable options - **Best for:** People who travel frequently but drive locally - **Consider:** May require a car for daily activities **Example 2: Score C in Accessibility + Score A in Ecomobility** - **Meaning:** Excellent for car-free daily living, but less convenient for long trips - **Best for:** People working/living locally with occasional long-distance needs - **Consider:** Long-distance travel may require more planning **Example 3: Score A in both** - **Meaning:** Well-connected on all fronts - **Best for:** Maximum flexibility in transportation choices ---- Understanding Your Weather Comfort Report ------------------------------------------ Your Overall Weather Comfort Score ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The overall score (from **A** to **E**) evaluates thermal comfort conditions based on air temperature, wind speed, and precipitation patterns. .. image:: _static/images/report/weather/global-score.png :alt: Weather Comfort Global Score :align: center Letter Interpretation ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - **A**: Excellent - Comfortable conditions year-round - **B**: Good - Generally comfortable with minor seasonal variations - **C**: Average - Noticeable discomfort in some seasons - **D**: Limited - Frequent uncomfortable conditions - **E**: Poor - Challenging climate conditions Page 1: Temperature and Precipitation Overview ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Understanding Seasonal Temperatures ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/weather/seasonal-temperatures.png :alt: Seasonal Temperatures The left panel shows **average temperature patterns** for each season based on the last 5 years. **For each season, you'll see:** - **Large colored circle:** Average temperature - **Maximum:** Hottest typical temperature - **Minimum:** Coldest typical temperature **Why this matters:** - High summer temperatures (>30°C) = Hot conditions, cooling needs - Low winter temperatures (<0°C) = Cold conditions, heating needs, potential for frost/snow - Large differences between max and min = More variable weather Key Indicators ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/weather/rainfall.png :alt: Rainfall :align: center Total precipitation over the last 365 days. - **"Typical year" comparison:** Shows if this year is wetter or drier than usual - **What's normal?** Varies by region .. image:: _static/images/report/weather/nearest-water-plot.png :alt: Distance to Nearest Plot :align: center Straight-line distance to the closest lake, river, or water body. *Why it matters:* - Water moderates temperatures (cooler in summer, warmer in winter) - Proximity for recreation - Can affect local humidity **Distance interpretation:** - Under 500m: Strong cooling effect, easy access - 500-1000m: Moderate effects - Over 1000m: Minimal impact Temperature Evolution Chart ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/weather/temperature-evolution-chart.png :alt: Temperature Evolution Chart over last 5 years :align: center Shows typical temperature variations throughout the year. **Reference lines:** - **Blue (5°C):** Cold day threshold - **Orange (25°C):** Hot day threshold Page 2: Sunshine and Heat Islands ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Key Indicators ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/weather/sunny-days.png :alt: Number of sunny days :align: center Days with strong sunshine (clear to mostly clear skies). **"Typical year" comparison:** Shows the average number of sunny days over the past 5 years, helping you see if this year is sunnier or cloudier than usual. *Why it matters:* - Solar energy potential - Outdoor activities **What's good?** Most people prefer 200-250+ sunny days/year, but very high counts (>300) in hot climates can mean excessive heat. .. image:: _static/images/report/weather/heat-islands-coverage.png :alt: Percentage of Heat Islands :align: center Percentage of urban area that's significantly warmer than surrounding areas due to buildings, pavement, or lack of vegetation. **Percentage meaning:** - 0-10%: Minimal effect - 10-30%: Moderate - noticeable on hot days - 30-50%: Significant - impacts comfort and cooling costs - >50%: Severe - major discomfort during heat waves *Why it matters:* - Health risks during heat waves (especially for elderly and children) - Higher cooling costs - Harder to cool buildings naturally Monthly Sunny Days Histogram ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/weather/sunny-days-chart.png :alt: Sunny Days Histogram :align: center Shows typical sunny day distribution across months. **Patterns to notice:** - Consistent bars = Stable sunshine year-round - High summer/low winter = Seasonal differences - Low bars overall = Frequently cloudy climate Heat Islands Map ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/weather/heat-islands-map.png :alt: Heat Islands Map :align: center Shows which areas within 1 km are heat islands (red/pink areas). ---- Understanding Your Water Report -------------------------------- Your Overall Water Abundance Score ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The overall score (from **A** to **E**) evaluates water resource availability and ecosystem health based on water stress levels and vegetation health indicators. .. image:: _static/images/report/water/global-score.png :alt: Water Abundance Global Score :align: center Letter Interpretation ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - **A**: Excellent - Abundant water resources, thriving vegetation - **B**: Good - Sufficient water availability, healthy ecosystems - **C**: Average - Moderate water stress, stable vegetation - **D**: Limited - Water stress concerns, declining vegetation health - **E**: Poor - Severe water stress, degraded vegetation **How the overall score is calculated:** The score combines two components with different weights: - **Water Stress (80% weight):** Pressure on water resources at watershed level - **Vegetation Health (20% weight):** Condition of local plant life Both components are averaged across all seasons over the last 5 years to produce your overall letter grade. Page 1: Water Resources and Ecosystem Health ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Understanding Your Sub-Scores ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Water Stress '''''''''''' Measures the pressure on water resources at the watershed level. - **What it means:** The ratio of water demand (from households, industry, agriculture) to available water supply - **Scale:** - 0% (no stress) to 100% (complete depletion of available water) - Higher values = greater water scarcity risk *Why it matters:* - High water stress affects drinking water availability - Impacts agriculture and vegetation health in the area - Affects long-term sustainability of the region **Your gauge score (A-E):** .. image:: _static/images/report/water/water-stress-score.png :alt: Water Stress sub-score :align: center - Based on mean water stress levels across the year - Data uses 2019 estimates based on long-term patterns (1979-2019), values are assumed stable year-to-year unless major infrastructure or climate changes occur Vegetation Health ''''''''''''''''' Measures the condition of plant life in your area. - **What it means:** An index based on vegetation greenness compared to its historical range for the same time of year - **Scale:** 0% (poorest condition relative to history) to 100% (best condition relative to history) - Reflects how well vegetation is thriving, which depends partly on water availability *Why it matters:* - Healthy vegetation indicates adequate water and good ecosystem function - Affects air quality and urban cooling - Reflects overall environmental health - Can indicate drought conditions or climate stress **Your gauge score (A-E):** .. image:: _static/images/report/water/vhi-score.png :alt: Vegetation Health sub-score :align: center - Based on mean vegetation health over the last year - Compares current conditions to the 2020-2023 baseline period Water Stress and Temperature Chart ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/water/water-stress-trend.png :alt: Water Stress and Temperature Chart :align: center Shows how water stress varies throughout a typical year alongside temperature. **How to read it:** - **Blue line (left axis):** Water stress percentage by month (based on 2019 data) - **Orange line (right axis):** Average temperature **Patterns to notice:** - High summer temperatures often coincide with peak water stress - Winter months typically show lower stress (less demand, more available water) - The gap between lines indicates the relationship between temperature and water demand Vegetation Health and Precipitation Chart ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/water/vhi-trend.png :alt: Vegetation Health and Precipitation Chart :align: center Shows vegetation health evolution over the last year alongside precipitation. **How to read it:** - **Green line (left axis):** Vegetation Health Index (%) by month - **Blue bars (right axis):** Monthly precipitation (mm) **Patterns to notice:** - Vegetation health typically responds to precipitation with a lag - Prolonged low health values may indicate drought stress - Recovery after rainfall shows ecosystem resilience Page 2: Local Water and Vegetation Details ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Key Indicators ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/water/rainfall.png :alt: Rainfall :align: center Total precipitation over the last 365 days. *Why it matters:* - Direct measure of water input to the region - Affects water reserves, agriculture, and ecosystems - Helps contextualize current water conditions **"Typical year" comparison:** Shows the 5-year average to help you understand if this year is wetter or drier than normal. **What's typical?** Varies greatly by region. .. image:: _static/images/report/water/vegetation-cover.png :alt: Vegetation Cover :align: center Percentage of the area covered by trees, shrubs, grasslands, and other vegetation (based on 2021 satellite data). **Percentage meaning:** - 0-20%: Very sparse vegetation (urban, desert, or agricultural) - 20-40%: Limited vegetation cover - 40-60%: Moderate vegetation - 60-80%: Good vegetation cover - 80-100%: Dense vegetation (forests, natural areas) *Why it matters:* - More vegetation = better water retention in soil - Cooler local climate - Indicator of ecosystem health - Affects local air quality and biodiversity .. image:: _static/images/report/water/nb-plant-species.png :alt: Number of Plant Species :align: center Count of distinct plant species observed in the area based on scientific databases (2020-2024 observations). **What the number means:** - Higher diversity generally indicates healthier ecosystems - Reflects both natural habitats and cultivated areas - More species = more resilient to environmental changes **Important notes:** - This count reflects **observed and recorded** species, not necessarily all species present - Scientific observation coverage varies by location - Urban areas typically have lower counts than natural areas Vegetation Density Map ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Shows where vegetation is concentrated within 1km of your location, based on summer vegetation conditions captured from satellite imagery. .. image:: _static/images/report/water/vegetation-density-map.png :alt: Vegetation Density Map :align: center **How to read it:** - **Color gradient:** Yellow (sparse) to dark green (dense) - **Red marker:** Your location - **White/blank areas:** Non-vegetated (buildings, roads, bare ground) **What you can learn:** - Identify nearby parks, forests, or green spaces - Understand how green your neighborhood is - See if vegetation is evenly distributed or concentrated in certain areas ---- Understanding Your Green Areas Report -------------------------------------- Your Overall Green Areas Score ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The overall score (from **A** to **E**) evaluates the ecological richness and natural quality of your surroundings, combining biodiversity (variety of habitats and species) with landscape characteristics (natural beauty and green space access). .. image:: _static/images/report/water/global-score.png :alt: Green Areas Global Score :align: center Letter Interpretation ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - **A**: Excellent - Rich biodiversity, diverse natural landscapes - **B**: Good - Healthy ecosystems with varied habitats - **C**: Average - Moderate natural diversity - **D**: Limited - Reduced biodiversity and natural areas - **E**: Poor - Low ecological diversity, limited green spaces Page 1: Biodiversity and Landscape Quality ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Understanding Your Sub-Scores ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Biodiversity '''''''''''' Measures the variety and quality of natural habitats within 1 km of your location. - **What it means:** Different habitat types (forests, wetlands, grasslands) support different species and contribute to ecosystem health - **Based on:** Scientific habitat classification from 2015-2019 *Why it matters:* - More diverse habitats = richer wildlife and plant life - Healthy ecosystems provide cleaner air and water - Greater resilience to environmental changes - More opportunities to connect with nature **Your gauge score (A-E):** .. image:: _static/images/report/green-areas/biodiversity-score.png :alt: Biodiversity :align: center Areas with forests, wetlands, and natural water bodies score highest. Urban and desert areas score lower. Landscape ''''''''' Evaluates the aesthetic and recreational value of your surroundings. - **What it means:** How much natural beauty and green space exists nearby - **Considers:** Trees, water bodies, natural areas vs. built-up spaces - **Based on:** Satellite land cover data from 2021 *Why it matters:* - Natural landscapes improve mental wellbeing - Green spaces offer recreation opportunities - Scenic environments enhance quality of life - Tree cover provides cooling and air quality benefits **Your gauge score (A-E):** .. image:: _static/images/report/green-areas/landscape-score.png :alt: Landscape Score :align: center Tree-covered areas, water bodies, and wetlands score highest. Dense urban development scores lower. Key Indicators ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ .. image:: _static/images/report/green-areas/endangered-species.png :alt: Number of Endangered Species in Area :align: center Number of at-risk species observed in a 1 km radius around you (2020-2024). **What this means:** - These are species classified by conservation scientists as vulnerable, endangered, or critically endangered - Their presence indicates important habitat that needs protection - Higher counts can mean either: (1) crucial wildlife corridor, or (2) species under pressure **Important notes:** - This count reflects **observed and recorded** species only - Not all species in the area may have been documented - Urban areas typically have fewer observations than natural areas .. image:: _static/images/report/green-areas/most-common-species.png :alt: Most Common Species in Area :align: center The species most frequently observed in a 1 km radius around you (2020-2024). *Why it matters:* - Tells you what wildlife you're most likely to encounter - Indicates the dominant ecosystem type in your area Page 2: The 3-30-300 Green Space Rule ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. image:: _static/images/report/green-areas/3-30-300.png :alt: The 3-30-300 rule :align: center What is the 3-30-300 Rule? ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This is a scientific standard for healthy urban green access, based on research showing that proximity to nature significantly improves mental and physical health. **The three benchmarks:** 1. **See 3 trees** from your home 2. **30% tree canopy** in your neighborhood (500m radius) 3. **Park within 300 meters** of your location Your 3-30-300 Assessment ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Rule of 3: Can you see trees from your location? ''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' - **What we check:** Whether there are trees visible from your address - **Method:** Satellite analysis of vegetation at your specific point - **Result:** Yes or No *Why it matters:* - Even a view of trees reduces stress and improves mood - Trees provide a sense of seasonal change and connection to natural cycles Rule of 30: Is there 30% vegetation cover nearby? '''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' - **What we check:** Percentage of tree canopy within 500m - **Result:** Your actual percentage + whether you meet the 30% threshold *Why it matters:* - Tree canopy cools neighborhoods, reducing heat stress - More trees = cleaner air and better stormwater management - Adequate canopy supports urban wildlife - Shaded streets encourage walking and outdoor activity Rule of 300: Is there a park within 300 meters? '''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''' - **What we check:** Distance to nearest green space larger than 5,000 m² - **Result:** Your actual distance + whether it's under 300m *Why it matters:* - Easy park access increases physical activity - Green spaces provide places for social interaction - Regular nature exposure linked to better mental health - 300m is roughly a 3-5 minute walk - close enough for daily use Understanding Your Results ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ **Meeting all three rules (3/3):** Your location has excellent urban green access. Research shows this level of nature proximity is linked to better mental health, increased physical activity, and lower stress levels. **Meeting 2 out of 3:** Good urban green access with room for improvement. Consider how you might enhance the missing element (planting trees, visiting parks further away, etc.). **Meeting 1 or 0:** Limited nature access. While this is common in dense urban areas, consider: - Visiting nearby parks regularly, even if beyond 300m - Supporting urban greening initiatives in your neighborhood - Creating green space at home (window boxes, indoor plants)