| Literature DB >> 33323042 |
A J Fairbrass1, H Chatterjee1, K E Jones2, D Osborn3.
Abstract
AIMS: A wide range of non-clinical nature- and culture-based interventions for the treatment of health issues have been evaluated in evidence and systematic reviews. However, common outcomes of these interventions have not been identified and neuro-bio-psychosocial mechanisms underlying how these interventions impact health are not well understood. We conducted a systematised review and compared the evidence for human responses to nature- and culture-based non-clinical interventions for a range of health issues and assessed the proposed mechanisms and conceptual frameworks underlying these interventions.Entities:
Keywords: culture; evidence; health; intervention; nature; review
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33323042 PMCID: PMC9047098 DOI: 10.1177/1757913920967036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perspect Public Health ISSN: 1757-9147
Figure 1Study flow diagram
Descriptive characteristics of reviews of nature- and culture-based non-clinical interventions for health included in this review (n = 60)
| No. of studies | |
|---|---|
| Group classification | |
| Children (<12 years) | 8 |
| Adolescents (13–18 years) | 9 |
| Adults (>18 years) | 18 |
| Undefined | 35 |
| Type of review | |
| Systematic review | 28 |
| Literature review | 23 |
| Meta-analysis | 6 |
| Cochrane systematic review | 4 |
| Scoping review | 3 |
| Critical review | 1 |
| Type of intervention | |
|
| |
| Visual arts | 22 |
| Music | 6 |
| Dance | 3 |
| Drama | 2 |
| Writing (including poetry, story-telling and journaling) | 2 |
|
| |
| Garden use | 13 |
| Horticulture | 6 |
| Care farming | 5 |
| Forest bathing | 4 |
| Outdoor exercise | 3 |
| Ecotherapy | 2 |
| Environmental conservation | 1 |
| Nature-assisted therapy | 1 |
Figure 2Findings in reviews of efficacy of culture-based (left-hand panel) and nature-based (right-hand panel) non-clinical interventions for health and wellbeing
Results are limited to those reported by high-quality reviews (⩾2 quality score, Table S1). Significant results reported by meta-analyses are reported as the lower and upper confidence intervals of the effect size(s) and coloured to indicate the direction of effect reported (green = positive, red = negative). Health outcomes are grouped following the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD) 11th Revision. See Table S4 for full results, including those reported in medium- and low-quality reviews (<2 quality score, Table S1), and Table S5 for mapping between health outcomes reported in reviews with the ICD classification system. ‘Env. conserv.’ refers to ‘Environmental conservation’ interventions.
Figure 3Potential secondary health and wellbeing outcomes proposed by reviews of culture-based (left-hand panel) and nature-based (right-hand panel) non-clinical interventions for health and wellbeing
Only outcomes proposed by high-quality reviews (⩾2 quality score, Table S1) are reported. See Table S4 for full results, including those reported in medium- and low-quality reviews (<2 quality score, Table S1), and Table S6 for grouping of secondary health and wellbeing outcomes reported in reviews. ‘Env. conserv.’ refers to ‘Environmental conservation’ interventions.