Zhang et al. Assess Greenspace and CVD Risk Using Nurses

February 12, 2026

Assessing greenspace and cardiovascular disease risk through deep learning analysis of street-view imagery in the US-based nationwide Nurses’ Health Study

Abstract

Background

Living near greenspace is associated with decreased cardiovascular disease (CVD). Greenspace estimates, however, typically represent all types of vegetation using top-down satellite images, which incorporate exposure misclassification and limit policy relevance.

Objective

We studied the association between street-view greenspace measures with incident CVD using a large, long-term prospective US cohort of female nurses.

Methods

We estimated the percentage of streetscapes composed of visible trees, grass, and other green (plants/flowers/fields) from 350 million street-view images using deep learning models. Estimates were applied to Nurses’ Health Study participants (N = 88,788) within 500 m of their residential addresses. We used Cox models to estimate associations from 2000 to 2018 between street-view greenspace measures and risk of incident CVD, assessed through self-report, medical record review, or death certificates, and adjusted for individual- and area-level factors.

Results

In adjusted models, higher percentages of visible trees were associated with lower CVD incidence (hazard ratio [HR] per interquartile range [IQR] 0.96 (95% confidence interval 0.93, 1.00]), while higher percentages of visible grass (HR 1.06 [1.02, 1.11]) and other green space types (HR 1.03 [1.01, 1.04]) were associated with higher CVD incidence. We did not observe evidence of effect modification by population density, Census region, air pollution, satellite-based vegetation, or neighborhood socioeconomic status. Findings were robust to adjustment for other spatial and behavioral factors and persisted even after adjustment for traditional satellite-based vegetation indices.

Discussion

Specific greenspace types may be protective or harmful for CVD. Aggregating greenspace into a single exposure category limits epidemiological research and potential interventions to increase health-promoting greenspace.

This study demonstrates that disaggregating greenspace is critical for understanding its cardiovascular effects. In a large, nationwide prospective cohort, higher exposure to street-view visible trees was associated with lower cardiovascular disease incidence, while grass and other low-lying greenspace were associated with higher risk. By applying deep learning to 350 million street-view images, we move beyond aggregate satellite metrics to provide actionable, policy-relevant evidence. Our findings suggest that urban forestry initiatives may offer greater cardiovascular benefits than investments in turfgrass, highlighting the need for specific, rather than generic, greenspace interventions in public health.

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Citation

James, Peter, Suel, Esrad, Lin, Pi-I Debby, Hart, Jaime E., Rimm, Eric B., Laden, Francine, Hystad, Perry, Hankey, Steve, Larkin, Andrew, Zhang, Wenwen, Klompmaker, Jochem, Coull, Brent, Yi, Li, Pescador Jimenez, Marcia. Assessing greenspace and cardiovascular disease risk through deep learning analysis of street-view imagery in the US-based nationwide Nurses’ Health Study. Environmental Epidemiology 10(1):p e442, February 2026. | DOI: 10.1097/EE9.0000000000000442

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