The importance of greenspace for mental health
There is an urgent global need for accessible and cost-effective pro-mental health infrastructure. Public green spaces were officially designated in the 19th century, informed by a belief that they might provide health benefits. We outline modern research evidence that greenspace can play a pivotal role in population-level mental health.
Mental health and greenspace
Mental health conditions are one of the main causes of the overall disease burden worldwide, at an estimated global cost of £1.6 trillion per year. Health systems across the world have not yet responded adequately to the current burden of mental disorders, and the gap between the need for treatment and its provision is wide.
Greenspace (sometimes ‘green space’) is an umbrella term used to describe either maintained or unmaintained environmental areas, which can include nature reserves, wilderness environments and urban parks. Often, particularly in urban contexts, greenspaces are purposefully designated for their recreational or aesthetic merits.
Global urbanisation has reduced access to and engagement with greenspace, but there is good evidence of a positive relationship between levels of neighbourhood greenspace and mental health and well-being. Individuals have less mental distress, less anxiety and depression, greater wellbeing and healthier cortisol profiles when living in urban areas with more greenspace compared with less greenspace. Large differences in disease prevalence are reported when comparing residents of very green and less green settings, even after controlling for socioeconomic status (Maas et al, 2009). Quantity of nearby greenspace buffers life stresses – a finding demonstrated across ages and cultures, having been observed both in an adult population from the Netherlands and in a childhood population from rural upstate New York, USA (Wells & Evans, 2003; van den Berg et al, 2010). However, causality is difficult to determine, as self-selection may contribute to the positive relationship between greenspace and better health, because healthier individuals tend to move to or stay in greener neighbourhoods. Nonetheless, individuals who move house from a less green to a more green area have been found to show significantly better mental health in the three post-move years, implying a sustained improvement (Alcock et al, 2014).
Greenspace in the living environment is also associated with lower income-related health inequality, and in the short-term individuals who report high negative mood are more likely also to select a natural area, rather than other types of area, as their favourite place.
Together, these research findings suggest that individuals’ desire for contact with nature is not just the result of a romanticised view of nature, but is an important adaptive process, which appears to aid optimum functioning (van den Berg et al, 2007).
Environments shape behaviours
Environments shape human behaviour – characteristics of individuals and environments act as boundaries within which behavioural invitations or possibilities (termed ‘affordances’) exist (Brymer & Davids, 2014). Characteristics of nature environments can promote affordances both for acute positive psychological experiences and for physical activity that in turn promotes well-being. Physical activity in greenspaces has been defined as ‘green exercise’ (Barton et al, 2016). A positive correlation between greenspace availability and physical activity level has been evidenced in systematic reviews. Indeed, physical activity at least partially mediates the positive relationship between neighbourhood greenspace and mental health and well-being. People who use the natural environment for physical activity at least once per week have about half the risk of poor mental health compared with those who do not do so; and each extra weekly use of the natural environment for physical activity reduces the risk of poor mental health by a further 6% (Mitchell, 2013). Blue spaces (rivers, lakes and coasts) are as important as green: it is not the colour that matters but the opportunity to behave and respond in a particular way (White et al, 2016).
Acute outcomes of greenspace experiences
Acute psychological outcomes of time spent in greenspaces have also been reported; beyond greenspaces functioning to promote pro-mental health behaviours, these environments have characteristics that can offer more positive experiences than equivalent time spent in other environments. Simple exposure to nature environments is psychologically restorative and has beneficial influences on individuals’ emotions and ability to reflect on life problems. Regarding physical activity, compared with built or indoor settings, green settings enhance exercise-associated improvements in affective state and attentional capacity; laboratory-based research has found that simply viewing simulated nature during exercise can also enhance these outcomes.
The therapeutic application of greenspace for mental health
Greenspaces are often used in a targeted way to deliver structured therapeutic interventions for vulnerable groups such as youth at risk, individuals living with dementia or mental ill-health, probationers and stressed employees. Interventions include wilderness therapy, social and therapeutic horticulture, facilitated environmental conservation, care farming, ecotherapy, nature-based arts and crafts, and animal-assisted interventions. For example, for adolescents with behavioural or self-esteem issues, wilderness greenspaces are used as vehicles for reflection over week-long expeditions, with relevant psychological and behavioural improvements frequently reported, such as enhanced self-esteem, self-efficacy, self-image, self-control, self-confidence, self-empowerment and decision making. For individuals living with dementia, engaging with greenspaces can positively influence eating and sleeping patterns, fitness and mobility, sense of well-being, self-esteem and control associated with improved social interaction and a sense of belonging. Emotional states are also improved via reductions in stress, agitation, anger, apathy and depression.
Research has gone some way to demonstrating the mechanistic importance of greenspace for mental health. However, to demonstrate the use of greenspace within mental health treatment, robust trials of greenspace interventions are required, of equal rigour to those by which pharmaceutical treatments are judged.
How and why, or just ‘that’ greenspace promotes mental health?
A philosophical point here is whether it matters how and why greenspaces can benefit mental health, or only that it does. The greenspace and health research area should consider directing its efforts along these two complementary agendas. It is clear that engagement with greenspaces offers benefits in terms of mental health and well-being, and thus greenspaces can function as an upstream preventive mental health promotion intervention. Therefore, one agenda of research should be to investigate the potential benefits of greenspace in relation to a range of previously unexplored measures of interest, and to consider how wide-ranging the benefits might be. The complementary research agenda should comprise examination of the mechanisms that underpin and link the reported beneficial outcomes (Craig et al, 2016).
If greenspace were considered in the same way as a drug for mental health and well-being would be, more detailed understanding of its mechanisms would lead to optimal dosage, and knowledge of when and for whom it might work best. Optimal doses need to account for a wide range of mediators (Shanahan et al, 2015), including:
environmental factors, both qualitative (e.g. biodiversity, air quality, noise) and quantitative (e.g. tree canopy cover), as well as weather
personal factors, such as age, gender, beliefs about the value of nature, nature relatedness, prior experiences and childhood memories, as well as perceptions of risk
social and community factors, including social interaction, trust, ethnic, cultural and social norms, and accessibility of green spaces.
Research indicates that potential mechanisms underpinning the positive relationship between greenspace and health are likely to include sensory-perceptual and immunological processes, air quality, physical activity, stress and social integration.
Conclusion
Given the current prevalence and costs of worldwide mental ill-health and the concurrent rise in global urbanisation, there is a need for greater interdisciplinary collaboration. It is important to incorporate greenspace into the design of buildings, healthcare facilities, social care settings, homes and communities to create shared spaces which facilitate interaction and attachment, foster well-being, and increase opportunities for green exercise (Kellert, 2016). Green spaces provide vital health services as well as environmental services; they are equigenic, reducing socioeconomic health inequalities, facilitating activity and promoting better mental health and well-being. The integration of biophilic design may provide a cost-effective public health intervention, which promotes the evident positive links between green spaces and mental health.
References
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5663018/
My Thoughts
This article walks you through the positives of spending time in greenspace. I think over the pandemic many people have realised the importance of spending time outdoors with the positive effects that it has on our mental health. Going for daily walks was most definitely something that helped me through the first lockdown in 2020 as it gave me thinking space. Barton and Rogerson talk about the different types of greenspace, it does not have to be a big open landscape with no people or civilization around. Greenspace can be your garden or nearby park that you can enjoy in many forms.
“Characteristics of nature environments can promote affordances both for acute positive psychological experiences and for physical activity that in turn promotes well-being. Physical activity in greenspaces has been defined as ‘green exercise’ (Barton et al, 2016). A positive correlation between greenspace availability and physical activity level has been evidenced in systematic reviews. Indeed, physical activity at least partially mediates the positive relationship between neighbourhood greenspace and mental health and well-being. People who use the natural environment for physical activity at least once per week have about half the risk of poor mental health compared with those who do not do so; and each extra weekly use of the natural environment for physical activity reduces the risk of poor mental health by a further 6% (Mitchell, 2013).”
Most of the exercise that I do is outdoors, whether that be running through Plymouth, hiking on Dartmoor or surfing along the coast of Cornwall. For me, interacting with the space by doing activities that you love allows you to build an innate relationship with those spaces that you immerse yourself in. I require the land to do the activities that I love. This human relationship with the land is built from the positive feeling of being in a space that allows you to do what you love. I feel an urge to be connected with the land in the closest way possible as it grounds me as a human, it's where I feel most at home. The land is also where I feel most creative, its where I make most of my photographic work as I feel it's important to share my relationship and outlook on the land.
Here Doctor Ian Alcock talks about a study which he did to follow the mental health of people over a 5 year period from moving to a green space after living in an urban area. They started the study 2 year before the participants moved out of their urban homes and began to see the changes in their mental health after events in their life. All of the events would raise their mental health but always return to how they felt before the event. However, over the 3 year period of the participants moving to a green space area, their mental health improved and sustained the duration of the study.
I think that it can sometimes be easy to overlook the mental effect that the location of where you live has on you. This is because you just feel as if it is what it is which makes you oversee the negative or positive effects that the location has on your mental health. This is something that I have thought about recently, especially through the lockdown of 2021 as I began to feel trapped in my terrace house in Plymouth. This was a time when I felt a strong urge to get out of the house and explore, walk and surf as much as I could. After spending the winter locked up in a house with white walls and no views out of the windows it has been an easy decision that during my final year of uni I am going to be living in the campervan that I am currently building.
Conclusion
These two pieces of research both conclude the same thing. Living within greenspace has a positive impact on one's mental health. It is also evident that it has a positive influence on ones feelings no matter how mentally sound they are. Outdoor therapy is used with people who have dementia, trauma, and a whole list of mental health illnesses to improve their wellbeing.
The reason I wanted to investigate this was so that I can place personal understanding towards my draw to spending time in greenspace. My photographic work explores, shares and creates a sense grounding within the landscape which is something that I convey in the work that I make. When I release the shutter and capture an immersive experience, I am doing this to inspire my audience with the beauty of the land. A beauty which is so greater than we are and one that I feel humans should connect with on a higher level. Nature awakens you to the grounding of our ecosystem and I believe that the mental positives it has is the calling for a closure and more connected relationship with the land.
Given the current prevalence and costs of worldwide mental ill-health and the concurrent rise in global urbanisation, there is a need for greater interdisciplinary collaboration. It is important to incorporate greenspace into the design of buildings, healthcare facilities, social care settings, homes and communities to create shared spaces which facilitate interaction and attachment, foster well-being, and increase opportunities for green exercise (Kellert, 2016).”
The conclusion of Jo Barton and Mike Rogerson’s report supports the study that was carried out by doctor Ian Alcock. Alcock's study explored the mental health improvement of people moving into greener spaces which supports the argument that Barton and Rogerson are making. Green spaces have a positive impact on people's overall well being and mental health and going forward it is important for humans to connect with the natural space around them.
I am the kind of person that would be quite content living in the middle of nowhere in a little cabin. This perhaps put me on the more extreme end of the importance green space has in my life. I feel that the connection one can have with the land is true and without superficialities which can form from the western world. It is easy to get muddled up in the realms of the western ideologies and it is important to be grounded by the land to find peace and happiness. Organic peace and happiness that comes from the natural system that we require to breath and feed. I think that being connected to that land that is around you awakens you to what is true and important for the sustainability of human life. This is something that I try and convey in my work and something that I feel is becoming pinnacle to my photographic practice.