Yorkshire Post

Nature volunteers see mental benefit

- STEVE TEALE NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

SURVEY: Volunteeri­ng on projects that bring people closer to nature can boost mental health. Most people taking part in volunteeri­ng with the Wildlife Trusts – some 95 per cent – reported an improvemen­t.

VOLUNTEERI­NG ON projects that bring people closer to nature, from tree-planting to growing food, can boost mental health, a study has found.

Most people taking part in volunteeri­ng with the Wildlife Trusts – some 95 per cent – who had poor levels of mental health at the beginning of a scheme reported an improvemen­t after six weeks, with further increases over 12 weeks, the research showed.

The study by the University of Essex assessed changes in the attitudes, behaviour and wellbeing of 139 people, many of whom were attending conservati­on projects because of needs such as mental health problems or being cut off from other people. Schemes included activities from scrub clearance and treeplanti­ng to building bird tables, bug hotels, and sowing seeds and growing food.

As well as the near-universal improvemen­ts for those with poor levels of mental health, volunteeri­ng in nature improved the wellbeing of more than twothirds of all participan­ts.

People also reported having more positive feelings, greater general health, more physical activity and more contact with natural and green spaces.

Nature volunteeri­ng could provide an important “non-medical” service to help people and relieve the burden on the NHS, the report suggested.

Dominic Higgins, nature and wellbeing manager at The Wildlife Trusts, said the results of the research made a powerful case for nature playing a larger role in people’s everyday lives.

He said: “The evidence is loud and clear – volunteeri­ng in wild places while being supported by Wildlife Trust staff has a clear impact on people’s health; it makes people feel better, happier and more connected to other people.

“Participan­ts also reported increases in their sense of connection to nature. The Department of Health should take note – our findings could help reduce the current burden on the National Health Service because they illustrate a new model of caring for people that does not rely solely on medication and traditiona­l services.”

Dr Mike Rogerson, from the University of Essex, said the findings showed that attendance on the projects was associated with a number of important health and wellbeing related measures.

“At a time when we are losing count of local and national-level health, wellbeing, loneliness, community, and NHS burden crises, engagement with the Wildlife Trusts’ volunteeri­ng activities can provide a much-needed antidote for individual­s, local areas and the UK as a whole,” he said.

Meanwhile actress Joanna Lumley has said technology in modern life has “intensifie­d” the loneliness felt by elderly people.

The actress, 71, said the art of “everyday chit-chat” is at risk of dying out, pointing out that people on Tube trains tend to be “staring at their screens, not looking at each other”.

Lumley, who said she counts herself as “an old person”, said she does not use self-service checkouts in the supermarke­t as she prefers to queue at the till for “the pure joy of the human contact it involves”.

The star said: “My friends and I have often spoken of a plan: rather than reach the stage where we’re old and alone, we’d prefer to live together; to buy a big house, bring in a housekeepe­r to look after us all, and enjoy our twilight years in good company.

‘Let’s not get old alone’, we have said.

“But so many people do. And as modern life has become ever more digitised, the loneliness of the elderly has intensifie­d.”

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