| Literature DB >> 34770112 |
Sebastian Hinde1, Laura Bojke1, Peter Coventry2,3.
Abstract
Internationally, shifts to more urbanised populations, and resultant reductions in engagements with nature, have been a contributing factor to the mental health crisis facing many developed and developing countries. While the COVID-19 pandemic reinforced recent trends in many countries to give access to green spaces more weight in political decision making, nature-based activities as a form of intervention for those with mental health problems constitute a very small part of patient pathways of care. Nature-based interventions, such as ecotherapy, are increasingly used as therapeutic solutions for people with common mental health problems. However, there is little data about the potential costs and benefits of ecotherapy, making it difficult to offer robust assessments of its cost-effectiveness. This paper explores the capacity for ecotherapy to be cost-effective as a healthcare intervention. Using a pragmatic scoping review of the literature to understand where the potential costs and health benefit lie, we applied value of information methodology to identify what research is needed to inform future cost-effectiveness assessments. We show that there is the potential for ecotherapy for people with mild to moderate common mental health problems to be cost-effective but significant further research is required. Furthermore, nature-based interventions such as ecotherapy also confer potential social and wider returns on investment, strengthening the case for further research to better inform robust commissioning.Entities:
Keywords: cost-effective analysis; economic evaluation; ecotherapy; greenspace; mental health; nature-based intervention; physical health
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34770112 PMCID: PMC8582680 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182111599
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Table of studies that conducted primary data collection relevant to any of the five components.
| Study | Publication Type | Study Design | Population | Intervention | Control | Outcome | Headline Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pank et al. [ | Commissioned report, not peer-reviewed. | Survey, social return on investment analysis, and qualitative study. | Broad range of stakeholders of the Gorgie City Farm. | Engagement with (as volunteer or visitor) Gorgie City Farm. | None | Broad range of outcomes related to mental health, eating habits, education, environment, NHS interactions. | Estimated a SROI of £3.56 for social value for every £1 invested in the project. |
| New Economic Forum [ | Commissioned report, not peer-reviewed. | Case reports and costing analysis. | 5 selected Ecominds participants. | 5 different Mind funded Ecominds projects. | None | Avoided public sector costs. | Annual public sector costs avoided of between £4151 and £12,799 per person. |
| MIND [ | Commissioned report containing two studies, not peer-reviewed. | Survey | Unspecified members of a local Mind green exercise groups. | 19 groups covering a range of gardening, conservation, and walking activities. | None | Qualitative questionnaire related to the benefits of the groups. | 109 questionnaires returned showing potential benefits of nature-based activities. |
| Survey | 20 members of local Mind associations (age 31 to 70). | Half an hour walk in a country park. | Half an hour walk inside a shopping centre. | Questionnaire covering self-esteem, mood, and mood disturbance. | Outside walk showed increase in all aspects of self-esteem and mood. | ||
| Wildlife Trust [ | Unfunded peer-reviewed publication. | Before and after study. | 318 members of 6 existing nature-based wellbeing projects. | Interventions range in design but all nature-based with focus on mental and physical wellbeing. | None | WEMWBS wellbeing scale collected at the start and end of each project. | Pooled results showed large improvement in wellbeing. |
| Thompson et al. [ | NIHR funded peer-reviewed publication. | Before and after controlled quasi-experimental study and cost-effectiveness analysis. | Community living near woodlands selected for improvement. | Physical improvements to woodlands and community engagement activities. | Control population selected who lived further from the selected woods. | Primary outcome was stress (using the PSS), secondary included EQ-5D, and physical activity. | 2117 responses indicated intervention was associated with increases stress, with no change in EQ-5D or physical activity. |
| Wilson et al. [ | Peer-reviewed publication. | Before and after study. | People referred from secondary and tertiary mental healthcare services. | 12 week programme of multiple ecotherapy activities in two areas. | None | Mental (WEMWBS), physical (SPAQ) and general (SF12) health questionnaires. | Little change in mental or general health but significant increase in physical activity. |