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https://read.qxmd.com/read/38558827/cultivating-reciprocity-between-people-and-planet-habit-stacking-planetary-health-prescriptions-into-existing-nature-rx-encounters-during-integrative-health-visits
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David Victorson
The reported benefits of nature contact on human health and well-being have prompted the rise of nature prescriptions with health professionals recommending nature exposure. Due to the success of nature prescriptions and calls for greater reciprocity between people and the planet, this essay proposes to leverage health behavior promotion strategies to integrate planetary health prescriptions (Earth RX) into existing nature prescription frameworks with a vision to counsel patients on both the health and well-being benefits of nature contact as well as earth-sustaining behaviors, all of which fosters a compassionate interdependence between personal and planetary well-being...
2024: Glob Adv Integr Med Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38464957/supporting-personal-growth-in-childhood-adolescent-and-young-adult-cancer-survivors-through-challenges-in-nature-a-qualitative-study-of-waya-wilderness-programme-participation
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mats Jong, Trine Stub, Miek C Jong
BACKGROUND: Childhood, adolescent and young-adult (AYA) cancer survivors often experience health problems due to late or long-term effects of their cancer or the treatment thereof. The general population gains health benefits from immersion in nature, and nature-based programmes seem to be an intervention that can promote health among childhood and AYA cancer survivors. OBJECTIVE: To explore the impact of the WAYA wilderness programme on the health of childhood and AYA cancer survivors...
2024: Glob Adv Integr Med Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37426731/what-is-nature-based-medicine-and-what-does-it-do
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John La Puma
One's personal health and well-being can improve with activity in natural environments or decline without it. Many chronic illnesses to which personal nature deficiency contributes-including anxiety, depression, attention deficit, diabetes, hypertension, myopia, and obesity-have been exacerbated with the pandemic. That those illnesses may be preventable, treatable, and even reversible with an added nature-based approach may seem novel, but it is not. Though the field of nature-based medicine is just emerging in the U...
2023: American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37132020/green-space-for-public-mental-health-an-ethnographic-study-of-ecotherapy-in-wales
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
E Lord
AIMS: In recent years, there has been a growing interest in the ways that human health intersects with exposure to nature. This article reports the findings of a research study investigating the experiences of people in South and West Wales who were engaged in a specific type of nature and health intervention: ecotherapy. METHODS: Ethnographic methods were used to develop a qualitative account of the experiences of participants in four specific ecotherapy projects...
May 2, 2023: Perspectives in Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37024932/the-tumor-ecosystem-in-head-and-neck-squamous-cell-carcinoma-and-advances-in-ecotherapy
#5
REVIEW
Yingying Gong, Lisha Bao, Tong Xu, Xiaofen Yi, Jinming Chen, Shanshan Wang, Zongfu Pan, Ping Huang, Minghua Ge
The development of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is a multi-step process, and its survival depends on a complex tumor ecosystem, which not only promotes tumor growth but also helps to protect tumor cells from immune surveillance. With the advances of existing technologies and emerging models for ecosystem research, the evidence for cell-cell interplay is increasing. Herein, we discuss the recent advances in understanding the interaction between tumor cells, the major components of the HNSCC tumor ecosystem, and summarize the mechanisms of how biological and abiotic factors affect the tumor ecosystem...
April 6, 2023: Molecular Cancer
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36562055/social-prescribing-of-nature-therapy-for-adults-with-mental-illness-living-in-the-community-a-scoping-review-of-peer-reviewed-international-evidence
#6
Tamsin Thomas, Christina Aggar, James Baker, Debbie Massey, Megan Thomas, Daniel D'Appio, Eric Brymer
Social prescribing of nature therapy "green social prescribing" facilitates access to local nature-based activities that improve biopsychosocial wellbeing outcomes, are affordable, accessible, and can be adapted to context. These are becoming increasingly popular and gray literature is emerging, however, peer-reviewed scientific evidence is exiguous. This scoping review aimed to identify and critique peer-reviewed evidence for green social prescribing interventions and develop recommendations for research and clinical practice...
2022: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35100045/horticultural-therapy-an-ancient-integrative-approach-for-modern-times
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Abd Moain Abu Dabrh, Anne Meore, Edward W Wilson, Adam Perlman
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
January 31, 2022: J Integr Complement Med
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34770112/the-cost-effectiveness-of-ecotherapy-as-a-healthcare-intervention-separating-the-wood-from-the-trees
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sebastian Hinde, Laura Bojke, Peter Coventry
Internationally, shifts to more urbanised populations, and resultant reductions in engagements with nature, have been a contributing factor to the mental health crisis facing many developed and developing countries. While the COVID-19 pandemic reinforced recent trends in many countries to give access to green spaces more weight in political decision making, nature-based activities as a form of intervention for those with mental health problems constitute a very small part of patient pathways of care. Nature-based interventions, such as ecotherapy, are increasingly used as therapeutic solutions for people with common mental health problems...
November 4, 2021: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34566764/validating-visual-stimuli-of-nature-images-and-identifying-the-representative-characteristics
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Terri Menser, Juha Baek, Jacob Siahaan, Jacob M Kolman, Domenica Delgado, Bita Kash
This study fills a void in the literature by both validating images of nature for use in future research experiments and examining which characteristics of these visual stimuli are found to be most representative of nature. We utilized a convenience sample of university students to assess 129 different nature images on which best represented nature. Participants ( n = 40) viewed one image per question ( n = 129) and were asked to rate images using a 5-point Likert scale, with the anchors "best represents nature" (5) and "least represents nature" (1)...
2021: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33363096/-recovering-with-nature-a-review-of-ecotherapy-and-implications-for-the-covid-19-pandemic
#10
REVIEW
Pourabi Chaudhury, Debanjan Banerjee
Connection with nature has been considered beneficial for psychological well-being since times of evolution. Differences in Indian and Western thoughts have viewed natural elements in different lights, varying between eco-centrism to anthropocentrism. The intrusion of technology and digitalized lives as a result of globalization has decreased connectedness with nature. Ecotherapy is a novel form of psychotherapeutic technique based on explicit environmental or ecological interventions. Social and therapeutic horticulture, animal-assisted interventions, care farming, green exercise, environmental conservation and wilderness therapy are some of the ecosystem-based approaches used in mental health...
2020: Frontiers in Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33114167/nature-based-interventions-and-mind-body-interventions-saving-public-health-costs-whilst-increasing-life-satisfaction-and-happiness
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jules Pretty, Jo Barton
A number of countries have begun to adopt prevention pays policies and practices to reduce pressure on health and social care systems. Most affluent countries have seen substantial increases in the incidence and costs of non-communicable diseases. The interest in social models for health has led to the growth in use of social prescribing and psychological therapies. At the same time, there has been growth in application of a variety of nature-based and mind-body interventions (NBIs and MBIs) aimed at improving health and longevity...
October 23, 2020: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30123175/ecotherapy-a-forgotten-ecosystem-service-a-review
#12
REVIEW
James K Summers, Deborah N Vivian
Natural ecosystems provide important services upon which humans depend. Unfortunately, some people tend to believe that these services are provided by nature for free; therefore, the services have little or no value. One nearly forgotten ecosystem service is ecotherapy - the ability of interaction with nature to enhance healing and growth. While we do not pay for this service, its loss can result in a cost to humans resulting in slower recovery times, greater distress and reduced well-being. Losses in these images of nature can diminish our basic happiness...
2018: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26715939/sowing-the-seeds-or-failing-to-blossom-a-feasibility-study-of-a-simple-ecotherapy-based-intervention-in-women-affected-by-breast-cancer
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ceri Phelps, Carole Butler, Alecia Cousins, Carol Hughes
Engaging in nature-based activities is recognised as providing the basis for easily accessible, cost-effective interventions which can have other important physical and psychological health outcomes. The aim of the reported feasibility study was to explore the acceptability and potential psychological benefits of a simple ecotherapy-based intervention for individuals affected by cancer. A total of seven women from an existing breast cancer support group agreed to take part in the study by cultivating and customising a garden bowl for three months, maintaining a diary, and participating in a focus group at the end of the project...
2015: Ecancermedicalscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21213562/embedment-in-the-environment-a-new-paradigm-for-well-being
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paul Stevens
Dominant models of health view people as essentially separable from their environment, affected directly by specific physical events or indirectly through idiosyncratic perceptions. Health is therefore a function of the individual, whether they are treated alone or in a group of similar individuals. A different (ecopsychological) view is that we are embedded within the environment; that notions of self, illness and well-being relate to where we are. Health practitioners and policy makers have realized that mind and body cannot be seen as being separate when promoting well-being, but 'self' and 'environment' is an equally false dichotomy...
November 2010: Perspectives in Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/5559426/ecotherapy
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
H G Rapaport
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
February 1971: Annals of Allergy
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