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Category: Public Health News

Article 26 Nov 2005

 

 

 

 

 

 

Connecting with nature can improve your health and wellbeing, say

researchers in this week's BMJ. The theory is known as ecotherapy: restoring

health through contact with nature.

 

Use of wildlife in some therapies is reported to improve quality of life,

write the authors. Smaller animals (for example, squirrels, owls, and

raccoons) have been used successfully in therapies for children with

emotional and behavioural problems.

 

People who take part in conservation projects report subjective health

benefits, ascribed to being outdoors and to feeling part of a greater system

connecting beyond the individual. Such projects can help overcome social

isolation, develop skills, and improve employment prospects, as well as

provide the known benefits associated with exercise.

 

Although initial research has been promising, the UK needs robust health

impact assessments of wildlife projects to determine their objective

therapeutic value, say the authors.

 

English Nature has advocated a national strategy to encourage people to

reconnect with nature and benefit from proximity to wildlife.

 

Partnerships between healthcare providers and nature organisations to share

and exchange expertise could create new policies that recognise the

interdependence between healthy people and healthy ecosystems, they

conclude.

 

Editorial: Human health and nature conservation BMJ Volume 331, pp 1221-2

 

Emma Dickinson

edickinson

BMJ-British Medical Journal

http://www.bmj.com

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