| Literature DB >> 33924490 |
Isabel Holland1, Nicole V DeVille1,2, Matthew H E M Browning3, Ryan M Buehler4, Jaime E Hart1,5, J Aaron Hipp6,7, Richard Mitchell8, Donald A Rakow9, Jessica E Schiff5, Mathew P White10,11, Jie Yin5,12, Peter James5,13.
Abstract
While many studies suggest evidence for the health benefits of nature, there is currently no standardized method to measure time spent in nature or nature contact, nor agreement on how best to define nature contact in research. The purpose of this review is to summarize how nature contact has been measured in recent health research and provide insight into current metrics of exposure to nature at individual and population scales. The most common methods include surrounding greenness, questionnaires, and global positioning systems (GPS) tracking. Several national-level surveys exist, though these are limited by their cross-sectional design, often measuring only a single component of time spent in nature, and poor links to measures of health. In future research, exposure assessment combining the quantifying (e.g., time spent in nature and frequency of visits to nature) and qualifying (e.g., greenness by the normalized difference of vegetation index (NDVI) and ratings on perception by individuals) aspects of current methods and leveraging innovative methods (e.g., experience sampling methods, ecological momentary assessment) will provide a more comprehensive understanding of the health effects of nature exposure and inform health policy and urban planning.Entities:
Keywords: built environment; exposure assessment; green space; greenness; health; natural environment; nature; nature contact; nature dose; nature exposure
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33924490 PMCID: PMC8069863 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18084092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Population-level data on time spent outdoors in nature collected in ten national surveys of populations within the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand.
| National Survey | Year | Geography | Population | Sample Size | Definition of ‘Nature’ | Measure of Exposure | Major Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Nature of Americans: National Report | 2012 | US | American adults, children, and parents | 11,817 individuals | Instructed to use own definition of nature | Hours in a typical week spent outside in nature (not including organized sports) | Time spent in outdoor activities averaged 6.6 h in a typical week and declined slightly with age from 6.7 h among eight-year-olds to 5.6 h among 12-year-olds. |
| Children’s Time Outdoors: Results and Implications of the National Kids Survey | 2007–2009 | US | General population | 3000 households (1450 youth) | Outdoor time | Hours in the week preceding household interview spent outdoors | Most children spent at least two hours outdoors daily during the week preceding the household interview (62.5 % of children spent two or more hours outdoors on a weekday, 78.2% on a weekend). |
| Missing Trees: The Inside Story of an Outdoor Nation | 2013 | AUS | Australians aged 14 to 64 | 1002 individuals | Outdoor time | Average hours per week spent doing outdoor recreation activities | One in three respondents aged 14 to 64 years spent on average less than two hours per week doing outdoor recreational activities, such as gardening, playing sport outdoors, taking the kids to the park or walking the dog. |
| Canadian Health Measures Survey | 2012–2013 | CA | Children aged three to six years (parent report) | 594 individuals | Outdoor time | Parental report of outdoor time | On average, participants spent approximately 2 h/day outside and about half of this time occurred during daycare/school hours. |
| Canadian Human Activity Pattern Survey 2 (CHAPS 2) | 2010–2011 | CA | General population | 5011 individuals | Outdoor time | 24-h recall diary information used to estimate time-activity patterns | A majority of the time was spent indoors (88.9%), most of which was indoors at home, with limited time spent outdoors (5.8%). |
| Monitor of Engagement with the Natural Environment: The national survey on people and the natural environment (MENE) | 2009–2018 | UK (England) | General population | ~46,000 individuals per year (468,000 total) | Outdoor time (time in open spaces in and around towns and cities, including parks, canals and nature areas; the coast and beaches; and the countryside including farmland, woodland, hills and rivers, does not include time in your own garden) | Occasions in the last week spent outdoors | During the 12 months from March 2017 to February 2018, nearly two thirds of adults living in England visited the natural environment at least once a week (62%). A significant proportion took visits less than once a month or never took visits (18%). On average, nature visits took place within 4.9 miles of the home, 86% of visits were less than 3 h in duration, and 52% of visits were taken to greenspace in a town or city. |
| How New Zealanders distribute their daily time between home indoors, home outdoors and out of home | 2015 | NZ | General population | 445 households (1026 individual participants) | Outdoor time | Time spent in microenvironments in one day | Individuals spent on average 15.85 h per day at home indoors and 0.54 h per day at home outdoors. |
| The National Human Activity Pattern Survey (NHAPS) | 1992–1994 | US | General population | 9386 individuals | Outdoor time | 24-h recall diary containing beginning and ending times, activity, location, presence of a smoker, time spent | Approximately 87% of time was spent indoors, 5 to 6% spent in a vehicle, with the remaining 7 to 8% spent outdoors. |
| Scotland’s People and Nature Survey (SPANS) | 2013/2014, 2017/2018, 2019/2020, | UK (Scotland) | General population | 10–12,000 individuals per wave | ‘Outdoors’ includes mountains, moorland, farmland, forests, woods, rivers, lochs and reservoirs, beaches and the coast and open spaces in towns and cities. ‘Visits to the outdoors’ refers to leisure trips taken from home or while away from home on holiday, provided the holiday was in Scotland. | In the last 12 months, outdoor recreation frequency and volume (monthly); outdoor recreation location and activity (bi-monthly), travel distance, duration, use (quarterly); motivations and benefits associated with visiting the outdoors (bi-annually); access issues (annually). | Between May 2019 and March 2020 [ |
| National Survey for Wales—Outdoor Recreation | 2016, 2018, 2020 | UK (Wales) | General population | 10,000 individuals per wave | Outdoor visits and outdoor recreation | In the last 12 months or four weeks, the number, length of time spent, use/activity, location, travel distance, and motivation for outdoor visits; access to a garden; outdoor recreation number of visits, use/activity, and length of time spent. | In the 2018 wave, approximately 81% of adults took part in one or more outdoor visits or recreation activities in the past 12 months, with a mean of 13.1 visits over the last four weeks. Outdoor visits were most frequent to local parks or other local space (25%), woodlands/forests (17%), and beach/sea/coastline (19%). The duration of outdoor visits varied, with most participants indicating spending up to an hour (28%), between one to two hours (36%), or two to three hours (18%) on average per visit. |
| BlueHealth International Survey (BIS) | 2017–2018 | Multinational (United Kingdom, Ireland, France, Spain, Portugal, Germany, Netherlands, Czech Republic, Italy, Sweden, Finland, Estonia, Greece, and Bulgaria, Hong Kong, Canada, Australia (Queensland), USA (California) | General population | 18,838 individuals (~1000 per country) | Green and blue space visits | In last four weeks, number of green/blue space visits; date of most recent green/blue space visit, type of green/blue space visited, time of day of visit, time spent in green/blue space, perceived quality of green/blue space, motivation for visit, main activity/activity, duration, travel distance to green/blue space. | Specific estimates of time spent in green and blue spaces are forthcoming, though some research on green/blue space exposure and health outcomes using this survey data is available [ |