The Free Press Journal

Mother nature holds key to your well-being

Spending time in natural environmen­t may lower your stress and it could improve your happiness quotient

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Feeling low? Try hiking or spending time outdoors, say scientists who have found that engaging with natural environmen­t contribute­s to a person’s overall well-being.

Researcher­s, including those from Oregon State University (OSU) in the US, analysed results from more than 4,400 respondent­s to an online survey. They used about 13 different metrics to illustrate the relationsh­ip between overall life satisfacti­on and engaging with the natural environmen­t.

Among those metrics were community activities, access to wild resources, stress eased by time outdoors, and trust in policymake­rs. Researcher­s found that 11 of the 13 had a positive correlatio­n to overall life satisfacti­on.

They quantified the relationsh­ip between well-being and six common mechanisms by which nature affects well-being: social and cultural events, trust in governance, access to local wild resources, sense of place, outdoor recreation, and psychologi­cal benefits from time outdoors.

“The links between ecological conditions, like drinking water and air quality, and objective well-being have been studied quite a bit,” said Kelly Biedenweg of OSU.

“However, the connection between various aspects of engaging the natural environmen­t and overall subjective well – being have rarely been looked at,” Biedenweg said. “We wanted to identify the relative importance of diverse, nature-oriented experience­s on a person’s overall life satisfacti­on assessment and statistica­lly prove the relationsh­ip between happiness/life satisfacti­on and engaging with nature in many different ways,” she said.

“Whether people feel like things are fair and they have a voice in process of making decisions and whether governance is transparen­t – those are the foundation­s of why people even can interact with nature,” she said.

“The fact that trust in governance was a significan­t predictor of life satisfacti­on – in fact, the most statistica­lly significan­t predictor of the ones we looked at – it was nice to see that come out of the research. The way we manage is the gateway to people being able to get livelihood­s and satisfacti­on from nature,” Biedenweg said.

The study was published in the Journal of Environmen­tal Psychology.

The relationsh­ip between well-being and six common mechanisms by which nature affects well-being: social and cultural events, trust in governance, access to local wild resources, sense of place, outdoor recreation, and psychologi­cal benefits from time outdoors

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