| Literature DB >> 32545651 |
Michelle C Kondo1, Kehinde O Oyekanmi1,2, Allison Gibson3, Eugenia C South2, Jason Bocarro4, J Aaron Hipp4.
Abstract
Nature prescription programs have emerged to address the high burden of chronic disease and increasingly sedentary and screen-based lifestyles. This study examines the base of evidence regarding such programs. We conducted a narrative review of published literature using four electronic databases. We included case studies, research design articles, and empirical studies that discussed any type of outdoor exposure or activities initiated by a health-care provider from an outpatient clinic. We examined articles for information on target populations, health outcomes, and structural and procedural elements. We also summarized evidence of the effectiveness of nature prescription programs, and discussed needs and challenges for both practice and research. Eleven studies, including eight empirical studies, have evaluated nature prescription programs with either structured or unstructured formats, referring patients either to nearby parks or to formal outdoor activity programs. Empirical studies evaluate a wide variety of health behaviors and outcomes among the most at-risk children and families. Research is too sparse to draw patterns in health outcome responses. Studies largely tested program structures to increase adherence, or patient follow-through, however findings were mixed. Three published studies explore providers' perspectives. More research is necessary to understand how to measure and increase patient adherence, short and long-term health outcomes for patients and their families, and determinants of provider participation and participation impacts on providers' own health.Entities:
Keywords: NatureRx; ParksRx; narrative review; nature prescriptions; outdoor recreation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32545651 PMCID: PMC7344564 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17124213
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Article selection process.
Nature prescription descriptions.
| Study | Program Descriptions | Population |
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| Christiana et al. [ | Patients receive counseling, education about local outdoor resources, and prescription for 60 min or more of outdoor physical activity per day | Children (ages 5–13) |
| Coffey and Gaurderer [ | Participants receive counseling, education about local outdoor resources, and a 1-day free pass to any state park day use area | Children (ages 6–10) |
| Razani et al. [ | Group 1: Patients receive counseling, education about local park resources, journals and pedometers | Children (low-income; ages 4–18) and parents |
| Razani et al. [ | Group 1: Patients receive counseling and education about local park resources | Children (low-income; ages 7–17) and parents |
| Zarr et al. [ | Patients receive education about local outdoor resources, and a prescription for outdoor physical activity | Children and adolescents (low-income) |
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| Cimprich and Ronis [ | Home-based program involving 120 min of exposure to the natural environment per week | Women with newly diagnosed breast cancer |
| James et al. [ | Patients receive counseling and are referred to guided outdoor activities, with incentives | Children (low-income; ages 2–13) |
| Messiah et al. [ | Patients receive counseling and referral to a park-based afterschool health and wellness program | Children and adolescents (low-income; ages 6–14) |
| Razani et al. [ | Patients receive counseling, and are recruited to formal outings involving unstructured nature exploration and physical activity once a month | Infants, children and adolescents (low-income; ages 0–18) |
| Razani et al. [ | Group 2: Patients recruited to 3 nature outings to parks where they engaged in unstructured nature play, physical activity and picnic, and quiet reflection | Children (low-income; ages 4–18) and parents |
| Razani et al. [ | Group 2: Three organized group outings at three parks (among the seven parks highlighted in the map given to all families) over three weeks | Children (low-income; ages 7–17) and parents |
Study characteristics.
| Study | Target Study Population | Research Question or Aims | Target Health Outcomes | Study Design | Intervention | Methods | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Cimprich and Ronis [ | Female patients diagnosed with breast cancer ( | What is the effectiveness of an early natural restorative environmental intervention aimed at counteracting attentional fatigue? | Attentional fatigue and performance, time spent in nature | Pre-post test | Patients received 120 min of home-based exposure to the natural environment per week. Control patients received no intervention. | Self-reported capacity to direct attention assessed ~17 days before and 19 days after surgery. A home-based intervention was initiated after the first assessment and before any treatment. Participants recorded type of nature activity and time spent in each activity daily. | The intervention group showed greater recovery of capacity to direct attention after therapy, compared with the nonintervention group. |
| Christiana et al. [ | (1) Patients (ages 5–13 years; | What is the effectiveness and feasibility of an intervention involving health care providers talking to their patients and parents about the importance of outdoor physical activity (PA) and prescribing outdoor activity for children? | Outdoor PA, sedentary behaviors, and time spent outdoors | Longitudinal pilot study | Patients received counseling about local outdoor resources and prescription for 60 min of outdoor PA per day. Control patients received no intervention. | Surveys administered to parents at baseline, 1 and 3 months after pediatrician visit; including items from Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System; Leisure-Time Exercise Questionnaire; amount of time doing sedentary behaviors; how much time spent outdoors; parent view of prescriptions. | Changes in children’s outdoor PA, time spent in the outdoors, and sedentary activities were not significantly different between intervention and control groups. Wald chi-square values: Days in the past week child was physically active 60 min+ anywhere (3.97) or outdoors (2.46); Frequency of PA anywhere (1.28) or outdoors (2.34); Time spent outdoors (2.99); Time spent in sedentary activity on weekdays (1.80) and on weekend days (0.80). |
| Coffey and Gauderer [ | (1) Patients (ages 6–10; | (1) Does a Park Rx encourage children to engage in a nature experience in the short term, as measured by redemption of the Park Rx at a local state park? | Increased time spent in nature | Quasi-experimental pilot study | Patients received counseling, education about local outdoor resources, and a 1-day free pass to any state park day use area. | Park staff counted redeemed ParkRx passes. Families had 15 weeks to redeem. | There was a 13% redemption rate. |
| Messiah et al. [ | Low-income, minority children (ages 6–14; | Can an affordable and accessible obesity prevention and treatment program reduce childhood obesity? | Increase in physical activity, decrease in BMI | Research design | Patients received education about local outdoor resources and prescription for outdoor physical activity. | Pediatric clinics patients were enrolled in the Fit-2-Play program. Focus groups were conducted with pediatricians, park coaches, and patients. | No results provided. |
| Razani et al. [ | Patients (low income; ages 0–18; | Help people engage in nature by diminishing the barriers (transportation, food, child care needs) | Combat stress and build resilience | Field report | Patients received counseling, and outings involving unstructured nature exploration and physical activity once a month. | Observation | Nature was a tool to deal with stressors associated with poverty; stress relief and time to relax with family motivated participation more than physical activity; variations in temperament and developmental stage make each child’s response unique; parents’ efforts to get their children outdoors should be acknowledged; being culturally responsive is important in nature. |
| Razani et al. [ | Parents of patients (low income; ages 4–18; | (1) Do park prescriptions improve parents’ stress, park visits, loneliness, physical activity and nature affinity? | Physical activity, stress, loneliness, park visits per week | Randomized clinical trial with pre-post survey | Group 1: Patients received counseling, education about local park resources, journal and pedometer. | Measures included Perceived Stress Scale, park visits, step counts, physical activity, UCLA Loneliness Score, salivary cortisol, and nature affinity. Measures occurred in both groups at 0, 1, and 3 months after enrollment. | Both groups saw decreases in stress (1.71 points); loneliness (1.03 points); cortisol level (0.05 μg/dL); and increases in park visits (1.22 visits per week); in time spent in moderate physical activity per week (24 min); and nature affinity (0.35 points). The unsupported group had a significant increase park visits compared to the supported group. |
| Razani et al. [ | Patients (low-income; ages 7–17; | (1) Are park visits associated with pediatric resilience over the three months after patients received a park prescription? | Resilience, stress, park visits per week | Prospective longitudinal clinical trial | Patients recruited to 3 park outings over 3 weeks and received counseling. Patients assigned to intervention group received support in getting to the parks. | Parents reported their child’s park visits per week, baseline adverse childhood experience score, their own stress and coping; children reported resilience and stress. Measures occurred in both groups at 0, 1, and 3 months after enrollment. | Resilience improved with each 1-day increase in weekly park visits (0.04 points (0.01, 0.08) at every ACEs level. |
| Zarr et al. [ | Patients (low-income; child & adolescent; | What is the impact of provider-based park prescriptions on outdoor physical activity? | Physical activity | Pre-post survey | Patients received education about local outdoor resources and prescription for outdoor physical activity. | Surveys administered to parents immediately before and 3 months after the intervention to assess changes in attitudes and behaviors around physical activity. | No significant changes in parental perceptions about parks or physical activity. Significant increase in the proportion of parents reporting of child’s park visits in the past year and that they believed that physical activity affected their child’s health. |
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| Christiana et al. [ | Children’s health care providers ( | What are the barriers for health care providers to prescribing outdoor physical activity? | Physician perspective | Interviews | None | Semi-structured interviews to explore perspectives on outdoor PA prescription programs for children and barriers to implementation. | Providers’ lack of time, awareness of the benefits of parks/outdoors, and of programs’ effectiveness, and perceived patient barriers, were major barriers to program participation. |
| Coffey and Gauderer [ | (2) Primary care providers (PCPs; | (1) Does the PCP’s NR and/or participation in the pilot impact their likelihood of writing a park prescription? | PCP Nature Relatedness (NR) score; likelihood to discuss the importance of nature during well-child exam | Quasi-experimental pilot study | Patients received counseling, education about local outdoor resources, and a one-day free pass to any state park day use area. | Surveyed providers about nature relatedness and likelihood to discuss nature with patients. | There were no difference in rate of park prescription between providers with low and high NR scores. Participation in the program increased PCP promotion of nature experiences. |
| James et al. [ | Pediatricians participating in Outdoors Rx program ( | How do pediatricians view the utility of Outdoors Rx, barriers to success, and opportunities for improvement? | Pediatrician perspective | One-time survey | Providers gave patients counseling and referred them to guided outdoor activities, with incentives. | Surveyed pediatricians on Outdoors Rx: (a) referral patterns (b) impact on physical activity counseling, (c) perceived patient interest (d) barriers to success, and (e) suggestions for improvement. | Findings reveal providers’ referral patterns, participation impact on physical activity counseling, perceived patient interest, barriers to success, and suggestions for improvement. |