4.3 Article

Forest bathing diminishes anxiety in undergraduate students: a pilot study in the Valdivian temperate rainforest

Journal

JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13416979.2023.2232086

Keywords

Forest bathing; mental health; mindfulness; anxiety; >

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Urban life leads to high stress and anxiety, which increases the prevalence of mental disorders. University students, a vulnerable group, are likely to develop anxiety and substance abuse related mental pathologies. Forest bathing is a nature-oriented intervention that aims to improve physical and psychological well-being by reducing anxiety and stress. In this study, we evaluated the impact of forest bathing on stress and anxiety levels of undergraduate students. Our results showed that a short session of forest bathing can effectively reduce anxiety in university students.
Urban life has generally resulted in lifestyles characterised by high stress and anxiety, all which has increased the pervasiveness of mental disorders. University students, a group highly vulnerable to these problems, are likely to develop mental pathologies associated with anxiety and substance abuse. Forest bathing is one nature-oriented intervention aimed at improving physical as well as psychological well-being by reducing anxious symptomatology and stress. Here we evaluated the healing impact of forest bathing on the stress and anxiety of undergraduate students at one local university. We also included others key aspects of psychological mental health that have received scarce attention in forest bathing research like mindfulness, wellbeing and self-regulated learning. Twenty-one students belonging to the Universidad Austral de Chile were randomly assigned to the city or forest groups and took part in an intervention consisting in a low-impact 30 minute walk and a 15-minute contemplation afterwards. Five instruments to evaluate overall mental health (and blood pressure) were applied before and after the intervention. Our results showed that a rather short session of forest bathing is enough to reduce anxiety in undergraduate university students. The other measures of psychological or physiological health showed no statistical differences before and after the intervention (between city and forest) or time effects (within the forest or city treatment). A potential reason for this might be related to the short duration of the intervention itself. Our results are encouraging regarding mental health therapy, as this type of intervention could easily be implemented on campus.

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