| Literature DB >> 35328901 |
Eleanor M Taylor1, Noelle Robertson1, Courtney J Lightfoot2, Alice C Smith2, Ceri R Jones1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With the global burden of disease increasing, particularly in relation to often preventable chronic diseases, researchers and clinicians are keen to identify interventions that can mitigate ill health and enhance the psychological wellbeing of people living with long-term conditions (LTCs). It is long established that engagement with nature can support human health and wellbeing, and in recent years, nature-based interventions (NBIs) have been advanced as of potential benefit. This review thus sought to systematically appraise published evidence of the application of NBIs to address psychological wellbeing for those living with LTCs.Entities:
Keywords: long-term conditions; nature; nature-based intervention; physical health; systematic review
Year: 2022 PMID: 35328901 PMCID: PMC8954238 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19063214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
PICO framework.
| PICO | |
|---|---|
| P—Population | People with long-term physical health conditions limited to cardiovascular disease, stroke, lung and liver disease, type II diabetes and chronic kidney disease |
| I—Intervention | Nature-, green- or outdoor animal-based interventions |
| C—Comparison | Treatment as usual, urban environments or no comparison |
| O—Outcome | Evaluation of effectiveness, as measured by improvements in psychological wellbeing and/or quality of life (QoL) |
Free text search terms for nature- and animal-based interventions with long-term conditions. These were combined with the Boolean operator AND.
| Search Terms | |
|---|---|
| Nature-based interventions | ((garden* OR green OR horticultur* OR “nature-based” OR “nature based”) N2 (therap* OR intervention* OR proximity)) OR ((healing OR restorative OR wander) N2 garden) OR “green prescri*” OR “social prescri*” OR “nature prescri*” OR “nature play” OR “park prescri*” OR “garden prescri*” OR “green space*” OR greenspace* OR “green exercise” OR “green infrastructure” OR “community garden*” OR “community allotment*” OR allotment* OR “outdoor exercise” OR “blue space*” OR “blue gym*” OR “green gym*” OR “park prescri*” OR “eco therapy” OR “eco-therapy” OR “wilderness therapy” OR “wilderness-therapy” OR “care-farming” OR “care farming” OR “farm therapy” OR “farm-therapy” OR “forest bathing” OR “forest-bathing” OR “environmental volunteering” OR “wild play” OR “nature play” OR “animal assisted therap*” or “animal-assisted therap*” OR “animal therap*” OR “pet therap*” or “pet-assisted therapy” OR “equine assisted therap*” OR “equine-assisted therap*” OR “canine assisted therap*” OR “canine-assisted therap*” |
| Long-term conditions | Cardiovascular or “cardiovascular disease” or Hypertension or “high blood pressure” or “Coronary Heart Disease” or “heart disease” or CHD or “Coronary Disease” or “vascular disease” or “Heart failure” or “Pulmonary Heart Disease” OR “Pulmonary disease” or “Respiratory disease” or Asthma or “Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease” or COPD OR “Liver disease” or “Chronic liver disease” or “liver cirrhosis” or “Fatty Liver” or Hepatitis or “hepatic disease” OR “type II diabetes” or “type two diabetes” or “type 2 diabetes” or Diabetes or T2DM or “diabetes mellitus” OR “Kidney disease” or “Chronic kidney disease” or CKD or “renal insufficiency” or “chronic renal insufficiency” or “renal disease” or “chronic renal disease” or “kidney failure” or “renal failure” or AKI or “acute kidney injury” |
* Truncation symbol which when used at the end of search terms finds any string of characters in that position; for example, therap* would identify therapist, therapies, therapy etc.
Summary of study characteristics.
| Author (Year) | Research Design | Participants | Intervention | Control | Psychological | Psychological | Physiological | Physiological Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beinotti et al. (2013) | Single-blind RCT | 20 patients (6 female) ≥1 year post-stroke | 16 weeks physio and horse-riding therapy (10 participants) | 16 weeks physio only (10 participants) | Medical Outcomes Study 36-item Short-Form health survey | Significant improvement in functional capacity, physical aspects and mental health following horseback riding therapy compared to controls. No changes in general health state, vitality or emotional aspects | N/A | N/A |
| Chun et al. (2017) | Two-sample randomised cohort | 59 participants (19 female) Mean age 60.8 years (SD 9.1) | Forest therapy programme (30 participants) 4-day trip involving meditation, experiencing the forest and walking | Urban comparison (29 participants) 4-day trip involving meditation and walking in the hotel | Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D17) Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) | Reduced BDI, HAM-D17 and STAI scores following forest therapy programme compared to baseline. Increased STAI scores in urban group following programme | Oxidative stress: total oxidant capacity and iron-reducing activity | No significant differences between forest and urban groups |
| Pohl et al. (2018) | Qualitative exploration | 18 participants (6 female) Mean age 60.3 1–5 years post-stroke | 12-week multi-modal intervention incorporating horseback riding | No comparison group | Individual face-to-face semi-structured interviews | Four themes identified: transformative experiences, human–horse interaction, togetherness and belonging, and the all-in-one solution | N/A | N/A |
| Jia et al. (2016) | Two-sample randomised cohort | 20 COPD patients (6 female) Mean age 70.1 years | Forest walking (10 participants) | City walking (8 participants) | Profile of Mood State (POMS) | Lower POMS scores of “tension–anxiety”, “depression” and “anger–hostility” in forest but not city group | Lymphocytes: NK, NKT-like and CD8+ T-cells expression of intracellular perforin and granzyme B Pro-inflammatory cytokines: interferon-γ (IFN-γ), interleukin-6 (IL-6), interleukin-8 (IL-8), interleukin-1β (IL-1β), tumour necrosis factorα (TNF-α) and C-reactive protein (CRP) COPD-associated factors: pulmonary and activation-regulated chemokine (PARC/CCL-18), surfactant protein D (SP-D) and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase (TIMP-1) Stress hormones: serum cortisol and epinephrine | Lymphocytes: no significant group difference in proportion of NK, NKT-like and CD8+ T-cells, nor their expression of granzyme B. Significant reduction of NK, NKT-like and CD8+ T-cell expression of intracellular perforin after forest bathing but not city group. Pro-inflammatory cytokines: significant reduction of IFN-γ, IL-6 and IL-8 after forest bathing but not city group. Slight decrease in IL-1β, TNF-α and CRP after forest bathing but not city group. COPD-associated factors: significant decrease in PARC/CCL-18 TIMP-1 after forest bathing but not city group. No significant change in SP-D in either group. Stress hormones: significant decrease in serum cortisol and epinephrine after forest bathing but not city group |
| Song et al. (2015) | Two-sample randomised cross-over cohort study | 20 male participants with high-normal blood pressure (HNBP) or hypertension Mean age 58.0 years (SD 10.6) | Forest walking 17 min walk | Urban walking 17 min walk | Semantic Differential (SD) method Profile of Mood State (POMS) | Increased SD scores of “comfortable”, “relaxed” and “natural” after waking in forest area compared with urban area. Reduced negative POMS scores of “tension–anxiety”, “depression”, “anger–hostility”, “fatigue” and “confusion”, with increased “vigour” after walking in forest area compared to urban area | Heart rate variability (HRV) and heart rate | Significantly higher parasympathetic activity during forest walking compared to urban walking. No significant difference in sympathetic nerve activity between groups. Significantly lower mean heart rate during forest walking compared to urban walking. Physiological measures were significantly related to the differences in air temperature and humidity between the forest and urban environments |
| Li et al. (2016) | Single-sample cross-over cohort study | 19 male participants with high-normal blood pressure (HNBP) or hypertension Mean age 51.2 years (SD 8.8) | Forest walking Day trip | Urban walking Day trip | Profile of Mood State (POMS) | Reduced POMS (D), (A), (F), (C) and increased (V) in forest walking but not city walking. City group also had increased (D) | Blood pressure and heart rate. | No significant difference in blood pressure between forest and urban day trips. |
| Ochiai et al. (2015) | Single-sample cohort | 9 male participants with high-normal blood pressure (HNBP) Mean age 56.0 years (SD 13.0) | Forest therapy 1-day programme involving walking, sitting and lying down | No comparison group | Semantic Differential (SD) method Profile of Mood State (POMS) combined POMS Total Mood Disturbance (TDM) | Increased SD scores of “relaxed” and “natural” after forest therapy compared with baseline. Reduced negative POMS scores of “tension–anxiety”, “confusion” and “anger–hostility”, and TDM after forest therapy. | Blood pressure Urinary adrenaline (corrected for creatinine) Serum cortisol | Significant decrease in blood pressure after forest therapy. Significant decrease in urinary adrenaline and serum cortisol after forest therapy |
| Song et al. (2017) | Two-sample, randomised cross-over cohort | 20 males with high-normal blood pressure or hypertension | Viewing forest landscape for 10 min while sitting (10 participants saw forest first, 10 saw urban first on 2 consecutive days) | Viewing urban landscape for 10 min while sitting | Modified semantic differential (SD) method completed after each viewing | Significantly increased scores of “comfortable”, “relaxed” and “natural” after viewing forest area compared to urban area | Heart rate variability (HRV) and heart rate collected at 1 min intervals and averaged across the 10 min period | Significantly increased high-frequency HRV during forest compared to urban viewing. No significant difference between high-frequency/low-frequency heart rate significantly lower during forest compared to urban viewing |
| Sung et al. (2012) | Non-randomised controlled trial | 56 participants (22 female) with hypertension | 3-day CBT Forest Therapy programme including 2 recreational visits to forest sites (28 participants) | Provided with printed educational materials for hypertension management (28 participants) | QoL with 5 domains: General Health (GH), Physical Dimension (PD), Mental Dimension (MD), Social Dimension (SD and Hypertension-related Dimension (HTD). Measured at initial visit and at 8-week final visit | Forest group showed significantly increased total QoL scores after forest therapy. Increases in MD and HTD but not GH or SD. No significant change in control group | Blood pressure: measured at start and at end of 3-day program. Daily self-monitoring morning and evening from first until last day of study | Blood pressure: marginally significantly larger decrease in systolic blood pressure following forest therapy (at day 3). No change in diastolic blood pressure or either of self-measured at week 4 or 8. No significant longitudinal change in blood pressure in either group |
| Wu et al. (2020) | Two-sample randomised cohort | 31 participants (12 female) with hypertension | Forest walking (20 participants) 2 days at forest site with scheduled walking, rest and staying in a hotel | City walking (11 participants) 2 days at city site with scheduled walking, rest and staying in a hotel | Profile of Mood State (POMS) | Reduced negative POMS scores of “tension–anxiety”, “depression”, “confusion” and “fatigue”, as well as increased “vigour” after forest bathing compared to city walking group. | Blood pressure, heart rate, oxygen saturation (SpO2%) and heart rate variability (HRV) | Significant decrease in diastolic blood pressure, but not systolic blood pressure after forest bathing compared to controls Significant increase in SpO2% after forest bathing compared to controls No significant change in heart rate Significantly decreased in LF HRV and LF/HF HRV after forest bathing compared to controls. Significant increase in HF HRV after forest bathing compared to controls |
| Mao et al. (2012) | Two-sample randomised cohort | 24 patients with essential hypertension (does not specify sex or age) | Forest walking (12 participants) 7 days at forest site with scheduled walking time, staying in a hotel | City walking (12 participants) 7 days at city site with scheduled walking time, staying in a hotel | Profile of Mood State (POMS) | Lower POMS scores of “depression”, “anger-hostility”, “fatigue” and “confusion”, with increased “vigour” in forest but not city group | Blood pressure and heart rate Cytokines: homocysteine (Hcy), constituents of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) including renin, angiotensinogen (AGT), angiotensin II (Ang II), angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1), angiotensin II type 2 receptor (AT2) Cardiovascular disease-associated factors: serum interleukin-6 (IL-6), tumour necrosis factorα (TNF-α) and endothelin-1 (ET-1) | Significant decrease in systolic and diastolic blood pressure after forest bathing compared to controls No significant change in heart rate Significant decrease in ET-1 and Hcy, RAS constituents including AGT, AT1, and AT2 after forest bathing compared to controls. Non-significant reduction in renin and Ang II after forest bathing compared to controls. Significant association between systolic blood pressure and Ang II, ET-1 and Hcy. Diastolic blood pressure was significantly associated with Ang II and ET-1. BP was poorly associated with the change in renin, AT1, and AGT |
| Mao et al. (2017) | Two-sample randomised cohort | 33 participants (14 female) with Chronic Heart Failure | Forest walking 23 participants 4-day trip | City walking 10 participants 4-day trip | Profile of Mood State (POMS) | Reduced negative POMS scores of “tension–anxiety”, “depression”, “anger–hostility” and “confusion” compared to baseline in forest group but not city group. | High-sensitive-reactive protein (hCRP) Bio-markers for heart failure: BNP and NT-ProBNP Cardiovascular disease-related factors: ET-1, constituents of the renin–angiotensin system (RAS) including renin, angiotensinogen (AGT), angiotensin II (Ang II), angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1), angiotensin II type 2 receptor (AT2) Pro-inflammatory cytokines: interleukin-6 (IL-6), tumour necrosis factorα (TNF-α) Oxidative indicators: activity for serum total SOD (T-SOD) and lipid peroxidation reflected by malondialdehyde (MDA) | Significant decrease in BNP after forest bathing compared to baseline. No significant difference in controls. No significant difference in NT-ProBNP in either group. Significant decrease in ET-1 after forest bathing compared to controls. No change in ET-1 and the five RAS constituents in the city group compared to baseline. Significant increase in AT2 after forest bathing compared to baseline. No significant difference in controls Significant decrease in serum IL-6 after forest bathing compared to controls. No significant changes in TNF-α or high-sensitive-reactive protein (hCRP) Significant decrease in serum MDA and significant increase in T-SOD after forest bathing compared to controls. No significant difference in controls |
| Wichrowski et al. (2005) | Two-sample cohort non-randomised | 107 participants (42 females) Inpatients on a phase I cardiac rehabilitation programme | Horticultural therapy 59 participants single session | Patient education class 48 participants single session | Profile of Mood State (POMS) combined POMS Total Mood Disturbance (TDM) | Reduced negative POMS scores of “tension”, “depression”, “anger”, “confusion” and “fatigue”, as well as increased “vigour” after horticultural therapy. TMD decreased after horticultural therapy. No changes following patient education class. | Heart rate before and after intervention | Significant decrease in heart rate following horticultural therapy, but no significant change following patient education class |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram depicting the process of screening.
Summary of POMS positive outcomes after the intervention (decreased negative, increased positive) by domain. + denotes this domain was significantly improved following the intervention.
| Negative | Positive | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author (Date) [Ref] | Tension-Anxiety | Depression | Anger-Hostility | Fatigue | Confusion | Vigour |
| Jia et al. (2016) [ | + | + | + | |||
| Song et al. (2015) [ | + | + | + | + | + | + |
| Li et al. (2016) [ | + | + | + | + | + | |
| Ochiai et al. (2015) [ | + | + | + | |||
| Wu et al. (2020) [ | + | + | + | + | + | |
| Mao et al. (2012) [ | + | + | + | + | + | |
| Mao et al. (2017) [ | + | + | + | + | ||
| Wichrowski et al. (2005) [ | + | + | + | + | + | + |