4.5 Article

Health benefits of a view of nature through the window: a quasi-experimental study of patients in a residential rehabilitation center

Journal

CLINICAL REHABILITATION
Volume 26, Issue 1, Pages 21-32

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0269215511412800

Keywords

Cardiac rehabilitation; pulmonary rehabilitation; leisure; recreation; psychological factors

Categories

Funding

  1. Norwegian Foundation for Health and Rehabilitation
  2. Norwegian Gardener's Union
  3. Bank of Roros
  4. Tropisk Design
  5. Primaflor

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Objective: To examine the health benefits of a bedroom window view to natural surroundings for patients undergoing a residential rehabilitation programme. Design: Longitudinal quasi-experiment. Setting: A residential rehabilitation centre. Subjects: Two-hundred and seventy-eight coronary and pulmonary patients provided data at all measurement points during the programme. Intervention: Blind, quasi-random allocation to a private bedroom with a panoramic view to natural surroundings or with a view either partially or entirely blocked by buildings. Main measures: Self-reported physical and mental health (SF-12), subjective well-being, emotional states, use of the private bedroom and leisure activities. Results: For women, a blocked view appeared to negatively influence change in physical health (time x view x gender interaction, F(4,504)=2.51, P=0.04), whereas for men, a blocked view appeared to negatively influence change in mental health (time x view x gender interaction, F(4,504)=5.67, P<0.01). Pulmonary patients with a panoramic view showed greater improvement in mental health than coronary patients with such a view (time x view x diagnostic group interaction, F(4,504)=2.76, P=0.03). Those with a panoramic view to nature more often chose to stay in their bedroom when they wanted to be alone than those with a blocked view (odds ratio (OR)=2.32, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.08-5.01). Conclusion: An unobstructed bedroom view to natural surroundings appears to have better supported improvement in self-reported physical and mental health during a residential rehabilitation programme, although the degree of change varied with gender and diagnostic group.

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