Article Synopsis

  • Spending time in nature improves health and well-being, but how much exposure is needed is not well-studied.
  • A study with nearly 20,000 participants found that spending at least 120 minutes in nature weekly significantly increased the chances of reporting good health and high well-being.
  • The benefits peaked at 200-300 minutes per week, and this improvement was consistent across various groups, indicating a need for more research to develop nature exposure guidelines, similar to those for physical activity.

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Article Abstract

Spending time in natural environments can benefit health and well-being, but exposure-response relationships are under-researched. We examined associations between recreational nature contact in the last seven days and self-reported health and well-being. Participants (n = 19,806) were drawn from the Monitor of Engagement with the Natural Environment Survey (2014/15-2015/16); weighted to be nationally representative. Weekly contact was categorised using 60 min blocks. Analyses controlled for residential greenspace and other neighbourhood and individual factors. Compared to no nature contact last week, the likelihood of reporting good health or high well-being became significantly greater with contact ≥120 mins (e.g. 120-179 mins: ORs [95%CIs]: Health = 1.59 [1.31-1.92]; Well-being = 1.23 [1.08-1.40]). Positive associations peaked between 200-300 mins per week with no further gain. The pattern was consistent across key groups including older adults and those with long-term health issues. It did not matter how 120 mins of contact a week was achieved (e.g. one long vs. several shorter visits/week). Prospective longitudinal and intervention studies are a critical next step in developing possible weekly nature exposure guidelines comparable to those for physical activity.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6565732PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-44097-3DOI Listing

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