| Literature DB >> 34574519 |
Veronica Murroni1, Raffaele Cavalli2, Andrea Basso3, Erika Borella1, Chiara Meneghetti1, Andrea Melendugno4, Francesca Pazzaglia1,5.
Abstract
This paper is a systematic review of quantitative studies conducted on the benefits of visiting gardens and gardening therapy for people with dementia (PWD) in an effort to assess the effectiveness of such treatments and obtain information on the most appropriate garden design for this population. This review followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols (PRISMA) guidelines. Four databases were searched (PubMed, Web of Science, PsycINFO, Scopus), with no time limits. Out of a total of 480 articles considered, 16 studies were selected for review. In all but two of the studies examined, gardening therapy and the use of therapeutic gardens induced psychophysiological improvements in PWD. The areas showing the greatest effects were Engagement, Agitation, Depression/Mood, Stress, and Medication. It also emerged that interest in this sphere has been growing in the last decade, but there is still a shortage of empirical evidence of the beneficial effects of therapeutic gardens in relation to the type and severity of dementia, and of garden design guidelines. Despite the limited number of studies investigated, the review confirmed the benefits of gardening and therapeutic gardens in PWD. There is nonetheless a need to conduct more quantitative research to support currently-available evidence and generate more information, focusing on garden design criteria, in-garden activities, the type and severity of dementia examined, and effects on caregivers as well as on PWD.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; dementia; horticultural therapy; restorative environments; systematic review; therapeutic garden
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34574519 PMCID: PMC8469939 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18189595
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flow diagram for article selection.
Main characteristics of the studies.
| Characteristics | Studies Selected (As Numbered in Reference List) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of participants | 1 < N < 10 | [ | |||
| 11 < N < 20 | [ | ||||
| 21 < N < 30 | [ | ||||
| 31 < N < 40 | [ | ||||
| 41 < N < 50 | [ | ||||
| 51 < N < 100 | / | ||||
| 101 < N < 150 | [ | ||||
| 151 < N < 200 | [ | ||||
| Study design |
|
|
|
| |
| No control group [ | [ | [ | [ | ||
| With control group [ | [ | [ | |||
| Single case [ | [ | [ | |||
| Data collection methods | Family report | [ | |||
| Staff report | [ | ||||
| Researcher report—direct observation | [ | ||||
| Task/test administered to participants | [ | ||||
| Measurements | Quantitative | [ | |||
| Mixed *** | [ | ||||
| Country of the study | USA [ | ||||
Notes: * a baseline followed by separate phases in which different treatments were introduced; ** comparing groups given different treatments; *** quantitative and qualitative.
Summary of the studies reviewed (n = 16).
| Study | Country | Sample | Sex | Type of | Stage of | Age of |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | USA | 48 | 26 M/22 F | unspecified | MMSE: | 46–98 |
| [ | USA | 34 | 34 M | unspecified | n.a. | 74–92 |
| [ | SOUTH | 23 | / | unspecified | mild or severe | / |
| [ | USA | 28 | 28 M | unspecified | n.a. | 74–92 |
| [ | USA | 129 | 53% F | unspecified | MMSE: | |
| [ | USA | 34 | 34 M | unspecified | n.a. | 74–92 |
| [ | CHINA | 14 | 1 M/13 F | unspecified | MMSE: | |
| [ | AUSTRALIA | 10 | 1 M/9 F | 7 Alzheimer’s | 4 severe, | 79–90 |
| [ | UK | 12 | 4 M/8 F | Young-onset dementia: | MMSE: | 43–65 |
| [ | JAPAN | 25 | n.a. | unspecified | middle-late | |
| [ | JAPAN | 16 + 16 | n.a. | unspecified | 8 severe, 14 moderate, 8 mild (no data on 2) | |
| [ | UK | 28 | n.a. | unspecified | middle-late | / |
| [ | USA | 1 | 1 F | unspecified | moderate | 76 |
| [ | ITALY | 163 | 42 M/121 F | Alzheimer’s disease | MMSE: M | |
| [ | USA | 4 | 4 F | 3 unspecified, | n.a. | 77, 95, 92, 95 |
| [ | FRANCE | 34 | 13 M/21 F | Alzheimer’s disease and related | MMSE: |
Methods and results of the studies.
| Study | Study Design | Study | Intervention/ | Control | Outcomes | Measures | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Multiple treatment | 9 weeks | Horticultural therapy (HT), 30 min per session, | Same group: traditional activities (TA) (exercise, crafts, games, puzzles) | Engagement | Ad hoc observational tool | HT > TA ( |
| Affect | Ad hoc observational tool | HT > TA | |||||
| [ | Pre-test, post-test | 2 years | Use of a wander garden after construction | No control group | Behavior | CMAI short form | T1 > T0 |
| Incident reports | No difference | ||||||
| Medication | Pro re nata (PRN) | T1 > T0 | |||||
| [ | Pre-test, | 5 weeks | Indoor gardening, 1-h sessions, twice a day, for 4 weeks | No control group | Sleep | Sleep diaries | T1 > T0 on: WASO frequency |
| Agitation | M-CMAI | T1 > T0 | |||||
| Cognition | HDS-R | T1 > T0 | |||||
| [ | Pre-test, | 2 years | Use of a wander garden after construction: HUG (high use of garden) | LUG | Medications | Dosage | Likelihood ratio test: T1 > T0 in both groups |
| Falls | Number | Total number of falls (both groups) decreases in T1 from 288 to 200; | |||||
| [ | Comparative RCT | 6 weeks | Horticultural therapy (HT), 50 min per session, twice a week, 6 weeks | Traditional activities (TA) | Affect | AARS (pleasure, anxiety/sadness, interest, no anger) | Wilcoxon–Mann–Whitney |
| Engagement | MPES | Wilcoxon–Mann–Whitney | |||||
| [ | Pre-test | 1 year | Use of a wander garden after construction | No control group | Agitation | Short form CMAI | A Hierarchical Linear Modeling |
| [ | Pre-test, | 6 weeks | Horticultural therapy (HT), 30 min per session, twice a week, 6 weeks | Other activities (OA) | Agitation | C-CMAI | No difference in T1 between HT and OA |
| [ | Pre-test, post-test | 6 months | Use of a therapeutic garden after reconstruction | No control group | Quality of life | DEMQOL | T1 > T0 ( |
| Agitation | CMAI | T1 > T0 ( | |||||
| Depression | SCDD | T1 > T0 ( | |||||
| [ | Pre-test, | 1 year | Structured gardening program | No control group | Wellbeing | Bradford Well-Being Profile | No difference in T1: |
| Cognition | MMSE | T1 < T0 ( | |||||
| [ | Multiple treatment | 7 weeks | Exposure to a Japanese garden | 4 exposure tests: standard garden Test1; Japanese garden with open door Test2; Japanese garden with closed door Test3, Japanese garden with closed door plus scent Test4 | Stress | Fingertip heart rate monitor | |
| Engagement | Behavioral assessment checklist | Test2, Test3 and Test4 > Test1 in attention; T2 > T1 ( | |||||
| [ | Multiple treatment | 6 weeks | Exposure to two Japanese gardens: one in hospital garden and one on terrace | 3 exposure tests: standard gardens Test1; Japanese garden with open door Test2; Japanese garden with closed door Test3 | Stress | Fingertip heart rate monitor | Wilcoxon test and Bonferroni post-test ( |
| Engagement | Behavioral assessment checklist | Wilcoxon test ( | |||||
| [ | Pre-test | 1 year | Exposure to a nature garden | No control group | Mood | Datasheets | Logistic regression |
| [ | Pre-test, | 6 weeks | Therapeutic gardening and CBT | No control group | Affect (anxiety) | BAI | Improvement 36% |
| Depression | GDS-SF | Improvement 53% | |||||
| Falls | Number | Falls decreased | |||||
| [ | Pre-test, post-test; | 6 months | Use of an indoor therapeutic garden (TG) 2 h per session, 5 times a week, 120 sessions | Spending time in a standard area (Control group, CG) | Behavior | NPI | Two-way repeated-measures ANOVA |
| Cognition | MMSE | Two-way repeated-measures ANOVA | |||||
| Medications | Dosage of quetiapine | Two-way repeated-measures ANOVA | |||||
| Stress | Salivary cortisol | Two-way repeated-measures ANOVA | |||||
| Diastolic blood pressure | Two-way repeated-measures ANOVA | ||||||
| Activity of the day | Barthel Index | Two-way repeated-measures ANOVA | |||||
| [ | Multiple treatment Single cases | 12 weeks | Use of an indoor sensory garden and an outside sensory garden | 4 phases: baseline phase1, indoor sensory garden phase2, outside sensory garden phase3, return to baseline phase4 | Agitation | CMAI, ABMI | phase2 and phase3 > phase1; |
| Quality of life | DEMQOL, | phase2 and phase3 > phase1; | |||||
| [ | Pre-test, post-test | 2 weeks | Use of a therapeutic garden (TG)12 h | No use of the therapeutic garden (Control group, CG) | Self-Consciousness | SCQ | TG > CG in T1 |
RCT: Randomized Controlled Trial; DCM: Dementia care mapping scale [48]; Short form CMAI: Short form Cohen Mansfield Agitation Inventory [51]; M-CMAI: Modified Cohen Mansfield Agitation Inventory [72]; HDS-R: Revised Hasegawa Dementia Scale [60]; AARS: Apparent affect Rating Scale [49]; MPES: Menorah Park Engagement Scale [47]; C-CMAI: Chinese version Cohen Mansfield Agitation Inventory; DEMQOL: Dementia Quality Of Life Instrument [54]; SCDD: Cornell Scale for Depression in Dementia [57]; MMSE: Mini Mental State Examination [59]; BAI: Beck Anxiety Inventory [50]; GDS-SF: Geriatric Depression Scale-Short Form [58]; NPI: Neuropsychiatric Inventory Scale [52]; ABMI: Agitated Behavior Mapping Instrument [53]; SIS: Six Item Screener [73]; SCQ: Self Consciousness Questionnaire [61,62,63]; WASO: wake up after sleep onset; NST: nocturnal sleep time; NSE: nocturnal sleep efficacy; TST: total sleep time; AE: active engagement; PE: passive engagement; SE: self-engagement; NE: non engagement; OE: other engagement; CBT: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy.
Horticultural/gardening activities presented in the studies.
| Study | Activity | Description of Activity |
|---|---|---|
| [ | Horticultural therapy, 30 min per session, once a week for 9 weeks | The time of year when the activities were undertaken is not stated, but each group had horticulture therapy in more than one setting, depending on the summer heat (indoors, in a screened-in porch, in an outdoor area with raised beds). |
| [ | Indoor gardening, 1 h per session, twice a day for 4 weeks | The time of year when the activities were undertaken is not stated. |
| [ | Horticultural therapy, 50 min per session, twice a week for 6 weeks | The time of year when the activities were undertaken is not stated. |
| [ | Horticultural therapy, 30 min per session, twice a week for 6 weeks | The time of year when the activities were undertaken and the type of trainer are not stated. |
| [ | Structured gardening program, 1 h a week, 46 sessions | From May 2009 to May 2010 |
| [ | Therapeutic gardening and cognitive behavioral therapy, 40/60-min sessions, 3–4 times a week, over 6 weeks | The time of year when the activities were undertaken is not stated. |
Gardens presented in the studies.
| Study | Type of Garden | Description of the Garden |
|---|---|---|
| [ | Wander garden | The garden could be seen in its entirety from a large floor-to-ceiling wide window in the dining room, which was also used as an activity room. Two doors, one on each side, led to a walkway that went around the perimeter of the garden. Two of the three outer walls of the walkway had large windows and there were three doors for exiting the garden. These doors had the standard electronic constraints to prevent escape. The third outer wall had a small window with panes above eye level for providing natural light without offering a view of the outside environment. The doors to the wander garden were usually open after breakfast and closed after dinner, even when the weather was unfavorable. Activities comprised daily garden viewing, garden walks, and garden activities when the weather allowed. |
| [ | Therapeutic garden | The garden was used in Spring. |
| [ | Japanese garden | Abstract naturalistic garden with plants, stones, stepping stones, bamboo fences, stone basins, stone lanterns. |
| [ | Nature garden | Observations throughout the year except January, peaking from May to September. |
| [ | Indoor therapeutic garden | The sessions took place in the morning between 9:00 and 14:00, in groups of about 20 participants, from June 2015 to June 2016. |
| [ | Indoor sensory garden | The time of year was not stated. |
| Outside sensory garden | The time of year was not stated, but the excessively cold climate limited participants’ opportunities to experience the outdoor garden. | |
| [ | Art memory life garden | The time of year was not stated. |