Woodland based health and wellbeing intervention
Research type
Research Study
Full title
Evaluating the impact of a 12 week woodland based health and well-being programme on personal wellbeing and woodland use
IRAS ID
233599
Contact name
Heli Gittins
Contact email
Sponsor organisation
Bangor University
Duration of Study in the UK
1 years, 11 months, 29 days
Research summary
Research Summary
Why
Despite growing interest in nature-based interventions there is a lack of rigorous evidence which demonstrates the impact on participants’ well-being longitudinally. Much of the research is based in urban greenspace and is not woodland specific. The lack of rigorous and independently generated evidence means that stronger links and reciprocal pathways between health and environment sectors are not being realised.What
The intervention is being delivered by Actif Woods Wales (AWW) an organisation which aims to improve people's health and wellbeing by involving them in diverse woodlands-based activities. The intervention comprises a 12 week woodland based health and well-being intervention of weekly 3 – 4 hour sessions. The objectives of the study are to develop an improved understanding of the influence of the initiative on personal wellbeing (self-rated health, physical activity levels, self-efficacy and self-esteem) and to obtain greater insight into the psychosocial-geographic dimensions of woodland use (e.g. social norms, beliefs and expectations, location, costs) and access.Who
There will be 12-15 participants per course who will be referred to AWW by the health and social services sectors, including G.P.s. and self-refer from GP advert** Participants will need to be judged well enough to join in with activities by AWW.The research is being undertaken as part of a KESS PhD in partnership with the Woodland Trust (KESS industry partner) and AWW.
Where
The programme will take place in woodland venues regularly used by Actif Woods Wales in Gwynedd, Anglesey, Ceredigion, Swansea, Neath Port Talbot, Treherbert and Merthyr.How
The study will be mixed methods involving a) a questionnaire at baseline, at the end of the course and at 3 months; b) end of course focus groups (where possible formed into groups with physical health issues, mental health issues) and c) semi-structured interviews at 3 months following the course with a randomly selected group of volunteer participants.Summary of Results
Lifestyle-related illnesses are a major cause of mortality and the health and wellbeing benefits of engagement with the natural environment are well documented. However, certain groups are under-represented in visitor figures, therefore this pathway to wellbeing is being received disproportionately. Nature-based interventions (NBIs) seek to extend benefits to wider, often otherwise marginalised social groups, but there is a lack of long term research meaning that the sustainability of effects is unknown. The primary aim of this study was to develop an improved understanding of one such initiative on personal wellbeing and woodland use over time.
The research involved adults with a range of health and social care needs recruited from Actif Woods Wales, a pan-Wales woodland activity programme. A quantitative study assessed participants at baseline (n = 120), end of course (n= 74) and a three month follow up stage (n = 57). A parallel qualitative study enabled an in-depth appreciation of processes of change with five end of course and four follow up focus groups.
End of course quantitative results demonstrated significant positive increase across all psychosocial measures, (mental wellbeing, social trust, self-reported health, self-efficacy, self-esteem and physical activity) with particularly marked gains for those who had reported mental health conditions. The study showed that these gains had held at the three month follow up stage providing critical evidence of maintained change. With regard to independent woodland visits, the frequency of visits had increased at course end and the indication at follow up was that this trend continued to rise.
Qualitative data showed positive shifts in self-perspective that had followed through to wider lifestyle changes which for some meant breaking out of a ‘rut’ of sedentariness and social isolation. These results were particularly important to understanding the importance of social processes and how confidence gained on the programme had led to increased interaction beyond it. Participant narratives showed how nature was experienced as a kind of ‘balm’ (the sensory experience, the positive impact on mood, feelings of escape) and played an important role in supporting the wellbeing benefits experienced. This altered perception of nature was maintained which had led to more and different use of woodlands (like spending longer there and ‘making more of it’). Breaking down deeply entrenched psychological, emotional and socio-cultural barriers, it was evident that the programme could act as an adult greenspace turning or re-turning point.
The study has helped to meet identified gaps for research that furthers understanding of how NBIs can support health, wellbeing and increased woodland use beyond the life of programmes. Findings thus hold implications regarding a need for sustainable funding and support for such projects to embed the role that they can play in delivering both therapeutic and preventative social care. They also point to a role for land managers looking to increase engagement for under-represented groups to consider the role that NBIs can play in broadening access to the benefits of the natural environment.
REC name
Wales REC 5
REC reference
17/WA/0297
Date of REC Opinion
26 Sep 2017
REC opinion
Favourable Opinion