A Healthier Tomorrow – August 2018
A Healthier Tomorrow –– Health benefits of being outdoors
Imagine a Healthier Tomorrow
By Alison H. Page with credit to Lauren Friedman / businessinsider.com
Did you know that spending time in forests, hiking in mountains, and just being outside can lead to significant health benefits? Being outside can improve memory, fight depression, and lower blood pressure. Here are some science-backed reasons to spend more time outdoors:
1. Walking in nature could improve your short-term memory.
Several studies show that nature walks have memory-promoting effects that other walks don’t. In one study, University of Michigan students were given a brief memory test, then divided into two groups. One group took a walk around an arboretum, and the other took a walk down a city street. When the participants returned and did the test again, those who had walked among trees did almost 20% percent better than they had first time. The people who had taken in city sights instead did not consistently improve.
2. Being outdoors has a demonstrated de-stressing effect.
Something about being outside changes the physical expression of stress in the body. One such study found that students sent into the forest for two nights had lower levels of cortisol — a hormone often used as a marker for stress — than those who spent that time in a city. “Stressful states can be relieved by forest therapy,” the researchers concluded.
Among office workers, even a view of nature out a window is associated with lower stress and higher job satisfaction.
3. Spending time outside reduces inflammation.
When inflammation goes into overdrive, it’s associated with a wide range of ills, including autoimmune disorders, inflammatory bowel disease, depression, and cancer.
In one study, students who spent time in the forest had lower levels of inflammation than those who spent time in the city. In another, elderly patients who had been sent on a weeklong trip into the forest showed reduced signs of inflammation. There were some indications that the woodsy jaunt had a positive effect on those patients’ hypertension levels as well.
4. Enjoying the outdoors helps eliminate fatigue.
Anxiety, depression, and other mental health issues may all be eased by some time in nature — especially when that’s combined with exercise.
One study found that walks in the forest were associated with decreased levels of anxiety and bad moods, and another found that outdoor walks could be “useful clinically as a supplement to existing treatments” for major depressive disorder.
“Every green environment improved both self-esteem and mood,” found an analysis of 10 earlier studies about so-called “green exercise.” That review also indicated that “the mentally ill had one of the greatest self-esteem improvements.” The presence of water made the positive effects even stronger, the findings suggested.
5. Being outside may protect your vision.
At least in children, a fairly large body of research has found that outdoor activity may have a protective effect on the eyes and reduce the risk of developing nearsightedness (myopia).
“Increasing time spent outdoors may be a simple strategy by which to reduce the risk of developing myopia and its progression in children and adolescents,” a 2012 review of the research concluded.
6. Spending time outside lowers blood pressure.
With all these other salutary effects, it’s no surprise that outdoor time — which usually involves walking — lowers blood pressure too.
That effect has been demonstrated by a number of studies. One intensive study of 280 participants in Japan found that along with decreasing stress hormone concentrations by more than 15%, a walk in the forest lowered participants’ average pulse by almost 4% and blood pressure by just over 2%.
7. It could improve your ability to focus.
We know the natural environment is “restorative” — that even applies to your waning attention.
In one study , researchers worked to deplete participants’ ability to focus. Then some people took a walk in nature, others took a walk through the city, and the rest just relaxed. When everyone returned, the nature group scored the best on a proofreading task.
The attention-improving effect of nature is so strong it might even help kids with ADHD: they’ve been found to concentrate better after just 20 minutes in a park.
“Doses of nature’ might serve as a safe, inexpensive, widely accessible new tool … for managing ADHD symptoms,” researchers wrote.
8. You may perform better on creative tasks after being outside.
“Imagine a therapy that had no known side effects, was readily available, and could improve your cognitive functioning at zero cost.” That’s the dramatic opening to a 2008 paper describing the promise of so-called “nature therapy” — or, as a non-academic might call it, time spent outside.
Another study found that people immersed in nature for four days boosted their performance on a creative problem-solving test by 50%.
9. Outdoor sessions may even help prevent cancer.
Research on this connection is still in its earliest phases, but preliminary studies have suggested that spending time in nature — in forests, in particular — may stimulate the production of anti-cancer proteins.
Boosts in the levels of these proteins that people get from being in the woods may last up to seven days after the trip.
Studies in Japan, where “shinrin-yoku” or “forest-bathing” is considered a form of preventative medicine, have also found that areas with greater forest coverage have lower mortality rates from a wide variety of cancers.
10. Forests also might boost your immune system.
The cellular activity associated with a forest’s possible anti-cancer effects is also indicative of a general boost to the immune system (the body’s natural ability to fight off less serious ills like colds, flus, and other infections).
A 2010 review of research related to this effect noted that “all of these findings strongly suggest that forest environments have beneficial effects on human immune function.”
11. With all this, it’s not surprising that outdoor time is associated with a lower overall risk of early death.
Nearby green space seems to be especially important for residents of urban environments, according to a Dutch study of 250,782 people, which found a strong positive connection between green space and health.
A follow-up study by the same research team found that a wide variety of diseases were less prevalent among people who lived in close proximity to green space. Other studies have made a direct link between time spent in forests and other measures of overall health.
A recent study published in Environmental Health Perspectives found a similar connection: greater exposure to greenness was associated with a 12% lower mortality rate. The biggest improvements were related to reduced risk of death from cancer, lung disease, and kidney disease.
So, get out and enjoy our beautiful planet – it is good for you!