Green Perspectives for Public Health: A Narrative Review on the Physiological Effects of Experiencing Outdoor Nature
Abstract
:1. Background
2. Method
Design and Methods
- Empirical study
- Publication date between January 1991 and January 2012 (20 year period)
- Published in peer-reviewed scientific journal
- Research conducted internationally
- Full-text article available in English language
- Study subjects were adults
- Investigation of effects of natural outdoor environments including urban green by measuring at least one physiological parameter
- (Statistical) inter-group comparison of effects
3. Results
3.1. Physiological Parameters used for Investigating Health Benefits of Nature in the Last Two Decades
- Brain activity. Park and co-workers reported on the influence of staying in a forest on prefrontal cerebral activity [34].
- Endocrine system. In total, nine endocrine parameters were investigated—one investigation was published in 1998 [35], whereas twelve studies have been published after the year 2002: adiponectin [43], adrenaline [37,43], blood glucose [35], cortisol [33,34,36,38,39,40,42,44,45], dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate [43], dopamine [43,47], glycated haemoglobin A1c [35], noradrenaline [37,43], and salivary amylase [32].
- Immune function. Two recently published studies examined Nature’s effects on parameters of immune function in body fluids of study subjects. Li et al. analyzed CD3+ cells, granulysin, granzymes A/B-expressing cells, natural killer cells, perforin, and white blood cell count in female participants, whereas Tsunetsugu and colleagues reported on immunoglobulin A concentrations in saliva of male subjects [33,37].
3.2. Significance of Differences in Health Effects
- Brain activity. A single publication on nature’s effect on prefrontal cerebral activity conducted by Park et al. revealed mixed results [34].
- Cardiovascular activity. Two studies analyzing blood pressure found significant positive effects of outdoor nature environments [35,40], six studies showed mixed results [31,33,38,41,43,46], and finally, three studies found insignificant effects [15,39,42]. Concerning heart rate, four studies found significant positive effects [39,40,42,46], three studies reported mixed results [33,38,41], whereas two studies revealed insignificant results [15,36]. Moreover, heart rate variability was investigated in six research articles: Two studies revealed significant positive effects [40,41], however, four articles reported mixed effects of nature [33,36,39,42].
- Endocrine system. Taking a closer look on endocrine functions, Li and co-workers reported on significantly increased serum adiponectin levels after contact with a forest environment [43]. Nature’s effect on adrenaline levels was investigated in two research articles. Whereas Li et al. found significant positive effects [37], Li et al. reported insignificant results [43]. However, contact with Nature significantly reduced participants` blood glucose levels [35]. Cortisol levels decrease was either reported as significant positive [38,40,44,45], mixed [33,34,39,42], or insignificant [34]. Significant reduction in dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S) and dopamine levels were reported by Li and co-workers [43]. Ohtsuka and colleagues revealed positive significant decrease in glycated haemoglobin A1c concentrations [35]. Two investigations conducted by Li et al. revealed significant positive effects of nature concerning reduction of noradrenaline concentration [37,43]. Yamaguchi et al. found mixed effects on a decrease in salivary amylase activity [32].
- Immune function. Outdoor nature exposure showed significant positive effects on parameters characterizing immune function-related responses including granulysin, perforin as well as CD3+-, NK-, and granzymes A/B-expressing cells, [37]. On the other hand, insignificant results were found in regard of immunoglobulin A levels [38] and white blood cell count [37].
3.3. Methodological Characteristics of Reviewed Literature
Study Information | Study Sample | Study Design | Reference | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Authors | Country | Size | Sex | Population | Exposure | Setting | |
1998 | Ohtsuka et al. | Japan | 87 | m/w | Diabetic patients | 30 or 60 min | Longitudinal. Forest, sitting/walking | [35] |
2002 | Rodiek | USA | 17 | w | Residents of nursing facility | <150 min | Outdoor (garden) vs. indoors | [44] |
2003 | Hartig et al. | USA | 112 | m/w | Students | 60 min | Nature reserve vs. urban area, sitting/walking | [31] |
2005 | Ottoson & Grahn | Sweden | 15 | m/w | Residents of nursing facility | 60 min | Outdoors (garden) or indoors, resting | [15] |
2006 | Gathright et al. | Japan | 11 | m/w | Inexperienced climbers | unknown | living tree or concrete tower in forest, climbing | [36] |
2006 | Yamaguchi et al. | Japan | 10 | m | Students | 20 min | Cross-over trials forest vs. urban area, sitting/walking | [32] |
2007 | Park et al. | Japan | 12 | m | Students | 20 min | Cross-over trials forest vs. urban area, sitting/walking | [34] |
2007 | Tsunetsugu et al. | Japan | 12 | m | Students | 15 min | Cross-over trials forest vs. urban area, sitting/walking | [33] |
2008 | Li et al. | Japan | 13 | w | Nurses | 120 min | Three different forest fields, walking | [37] |
2008 | Park et al. | Japan | 12 | m | Students | 15 min | Cross-over trials forest vs. urban area, sitting/walking | [39] |
2009 | Lee et al. | Japan | 12 | m | Students | 30 min | Cross-over trials forest vs. urban area | [38] |
2009 | Park et al. | Japan | 12 | m | Students | 15 min | Cross-over trials forest vs. urban area, sitting/walking | [41] |
2010 | Kjellgren & Buhrkall | Sweden | 18 | m/w | Stressed/burn-out patients | 30 min | Simulated vs. real nature, sitting | [46] |
2010 | Park et al. | Japan | 12 | m | Students | 30 min | Cross-over trials forest vs. urban area, sitting/walking | [40] |
2011 | Lee et al. | Japan | 12 | m | Students | 15 min | Cross-over trials forest vs. urban area, sitting | [42] |
2011 | Li et al. | Japan | 16 | m | Healthy males | 120 min | Urban vs. forest, walking (morning and afternoon) | [43] |
2011 | Van den Berg & Custers | The Netherlands | 30 | m/w | Allotment gardeners | 30 min | Performing stressful task, outdoors vs. indoors | [45] |
Category | Study Characteristics | References |
---|---|---|
Study sample | Size | |
n = 10–18 | [15,32,33,34,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,46] | |
n = 30 | [45] | |
n = 87 | [35] | |
n = 112 | [31] | |
Sex | ||
Males | [32,33,34,38,39,40,41,42,43] | |
Females | [37,44] | |
Mixed | [15,31,35,36,45,46] | |
Participants | ||
Students | [31,32,33,34,38,39,40,41,42] | |
Elderly people | [15,44] | |
Diabetic patients | [35] | |
Stress/Burnout syndrome patients | [46] | |
Climbers | [36] | |
Nurses | [37] | |
Healthy men | [43] | |
Allotment gardeners | [45] | |
Exposure | Cross-sectional study design | |
15–20 min | [32,33,34,39,41,42] | |
30 min | [38,40,45,46] | |
60 min | [15,31] | |
120 min | [37,43] | |
<150 min | [44] | |
Unspecified | [36] | |
Longitudinal study design | ||
9 × 30 min or 60 min over 6 years | [35] | |
Setting | Environment | |
Urban vs. nature | [31,32,33,34,38,39,40,41,42,43] | |
Outdoor vs. indoor | [15,44,45] | |
Nature | [35,36,37,46] | |
Landscape | ||
Forest | [32,33,34,38,39,40,41,42,43,46] | |
Garden | [15,44,45] | |
Wildlife reserve | [31] | |
Geographical area | ||
Japan | [32,33,34,38,39,40,41,42,43] | |
Europe | [15,45,46] | |
USA | [31,44] |
4. Discussion
5. Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Haluza, D.; Schönbauer, R.; Cervinka, R. Green Perspectives for Public Health: A Narrative Review on the Physiological Effects of Experiencing Outdoor Nature. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2014, 11, 5445-5461. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph110505445
Haluza D, Schönbauer R, Cervinka R. Green Perspectives for Public Health: A Narrative Review on the Physiological Effects of Experiencing Outdoor Nature. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2014; 11(5):5445-5461. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph110505445
Chicago/Turabian StyleHaluza, Daniela, Regina Schönbauer, and Renate Cervinka. 2014. "Green Perspectives for Public Health: A Narrative Review on the Physiological Effects of Experiencing Outdoor Nature" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 11, no. 5: 5445-5461. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph110505445
APA StyleHaluza, D., Schönbauer, R., & Cervinka, R. (2014). Green Perspectives for Public Health: A Narrative Review on the Physiological Effects of Experiencing Outdoor Nature. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 11(5), 5445-5461. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph110505445