| Literature DB >> 31684109 |
Carina Mnich1, Susanne Weyland2, Darko Jekauc3, Jasper Schipperijn4.
Abstract
Both physical activity (PA) and nature exposure are associated with several youth health benefits. However, the health outcomes when being physically active in nature, called Green Exercise (GE), are less clear. Thus, the purpose of this systematic review was to provide an overview of the psychosocial and physiological outcomes of GE in children and adolescents and to outline future GE research directions. The PRISMA statement guided the review. Web of Science, PubMed, ERIC, and APA PsychNET were systematically searched in February 2019, including studies between 2000 and 2019. Fourteen of 1175 identified publications were included, which reported 15 different psychosocial and six different physiological outcomes, with some studies reporting more than one outcome. For 16 outcomes, studies reported either similar or no effects for both GE and comparison groups. For six outcomes, studies reported stronger effects for GE, for three outcomes, studies reported stronger effects in the comparison group. Evidence was rated as weak, using the EPHPP tool. Thus, GE does not have deleterious effects for children and adolescents compared to PA in other settings. GE might be beneficial; however, due to the study's heterogeneity and quality, it is premature to make definite conclusions. Future research should build the quality of evidence for GE, use more rigorous research designs, and investigate the underlying effects and mechanisms of GE.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents; children; green exercise; nature; outdoors; physical activity
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31684109 PMCID: PMC6862643 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16214266
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Study selection criteria.
| PICOS | Eligibility Criteria |
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Study participants younger than 18 years |
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Any PA/exercise conducted in nature (independent variable) Measurement of PA/exercise |
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No firm comparison group determined |
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Any psychosocial or physiological outcome measured and reported Psychosocial outcomes: individual’s social and psychological aspects, including, but not limited to cognitions, emotions, and mental health [ Physiological outcomes: bodily changes due to stimuli response [ |
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No limitations regarding the study design |
Figure 1Flow diagram of the study selection process.
Characteristics of the included studies.
| Author/Year | Study Design | Participants and Country | Type of Green Exercise and Procedures | Outcome Variable(s) | Measurement Instrument(s) | Results | Quality Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barton et al. (2015) [ | Crossover RCT | 52 boys and girls | Intervention and control condition in both urban and rural school, available during lunch time break (55 min) at both schools | Self-esteem (SE) | Accelerometer | ○ = SE | Weak |
| Duncan et al. (2014) [ | Crossover RCT | 14 children (50% female) | Two 15 min bouts of cycling at in two lab conditions | Blood pressure (BP) | Automated oscillometric device | ↓↓ systolic BP 15 min post-exercise | Weak |
| Faber Taylor & Kuo (2009) [ | Crossover RCT | 17 children with (12% female) attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) | 20 min guided walk in three different settings | Attention | Digit Span Backwards (DSB) | ↑↑ Digit Span Backwards score post-intervention | Moderate |
| Flynn et al. (2017) [ | One group pre-post | 27 children in 16 families (51.9% female) | Four-week outdoor PA family intervention | PA self-efficacy | Weekly PA activity logs (filled in by parents) | ○ PA enjoyment and self-efficacy | Weak |
| Gopinath, Baur et al.; Gopinath, Hardy et al. (2011) [ | Cross-sectional | 1765 children (48.3% female) [ | Comparison of children | Retinal Arteriolar and venular Diameter | Questionnaire on PA (proxy-report through parents) | = retinal arteriolar and venular diameter | Weak |
| Gopinath et al. (2012) [ | Prospective cohort study | Cross-sectional: 1094 adolescents (56.1 % female) longitudinal: 775 children and adolescents | five-year cohort study. Comparison of children cross-sectionally (at follow-up) and longitudinally. QoL was only measured at follow-up. | Health related quality of life (QoL) | Questionnaire on PA | ↑ QoL in control group in low tertiles | Weak |
| Hammond et al. (2011) [ | Cross-sectional | 140 parents (84% female) of children between 6 and 13 years | One-time questionnaire accessed through parents (proxy-reporting) to report about children’s health problems and PA in two settings | Health problems | Health inventory | ○ = health problems (body pain/discomfort, trouble sleeping, repeated upset stomach, feeling tired/having low energy) | Weak |
| Liu et al. (2015) [ | Prospectivecohort study | 5238 children (52.2% female) | six-year cohort study (baseline at age 6). Questionnaire on frequency of outdoor PA and self-reported health at baseline and follow-up. | Self-reported health | Self-report questionnaire about outdoor PA | ↑↑ self-reported health at baseline and follow-up | Weak |
| Parsons et al. (2018) [ | Cross-sectional study | 447 children (51.5% female) | Data collection on sleep and PA indoors and outdoors in child-care centers | Sleep duration | Sleep diary filled in by parents and child care center staff | ○ = sleep duration | Weak |
| Raney et al. (2019) [ | Nonrandomized controlled trial | 437 children (51.1% female) | Outdoor PA in school playgrounds during 20 min recess | Antisocial interactions | Accelerometers | ↓↓ of physical and verbal conflicts after four months | Weak |
| Reed et al. (2013) [ | Crossover RCT | 86 boys and girls | Running over 1.5 miles in two settings; participants engaged in both conditions | SE | PA questionnaire for adolescents | ↑ = SE | Weak |
| Wood et al. (2013) [ | Crossover RCT | 25 children (56% female) | Laboratory condition: All participants engaged in two constant load tests on a cycle ergometer (10 min) whilst viewing two types of picture series | SE | Rosenberg SE scale | ↑ = SE and fatigue | Weak |
| Wood et al. (2014) [ | Crossover RCT | 60 children (50% female) | Participants engaged in two orienteering courses (20 min, respectively) | SE | Accelerometer | ↑ = SE | Weak |
Table legend: ↑ increase; ↑↑ stronger increase/effect in intervention/exposure group compared to control group; ○ no effect /association; = no differences between intervention/exposure and control group; ↓ decrease; ↓↓ stronger decrease/effect in intervention/exposure group compared to control group; If = is combined with another symbol (e.g., ↑=), this means that both intervention/exposure and control group had the same effect; SE = self-esteem; BP = blood pressure; SB = selection bias, SD = study design, C = Confounders, B = Blinding, DCM = Data collection methods, WD = Withdrawals/Dropouts, N/A = Not applicable.
Effectiveness and psychosocial outcomes of green exercise (GE).
| Psychosocial Outcome | Stronger/only Effect Intervention/Exposure Group | Effect both in Intervention and Control Group | No Effect neither in Intervention or Control Group/ | Stronger/Only Effect in Control Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self-esteem | ↑ [ | [ | ||
| Fatigue | ↑ [ | |||
| Vigor | ↓ [ | [ | ||
| Tension | ↓ [ | [ | ||
| Anger | [ | |||
| Depression | [ | |||
| Confusion | [ | |||
| Attention | ↑ [ | |||
| Setting rating | [ | |||
| PAself-efficacy | [ | |||
| PA enjoyment | [ | |||
| Social support | ↑ [ | |||
| Health-related quality of life | ↑ [ | ↑ [ | ||
| Self-reported health | ↑ [ | [ | ||
| Antisocialinteractions | ↓ [ |
Table legend: ↑ positive association; ↓ negative association.
Effectiveness and physiological outcomes of GE.
| Physiological Outcome | Stronger/only Effect Intervention/Exposure Group | Effect both in Intervention and Control Group | No effect neither in Intervention or Control Group/ | Stronger/Only Effect in Control Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Systolic BP | ↓ [ | [ | ||
| Diastolic BP | [ | ↓ [ | ||
| Mean arterial BP | ↓ [ | |||
| Heart rate | ↑ [ | |||
| Retinal diameter | [ | |||
| Sleep duration | [ |
Table legend: ↑ positive association; ↓ negative association.