San Diego Union-Tribune

GARDENING CAN ALSO CULTIVATE BETTER HEALTH

- BY ERIN BLAKEMORE Blakemore is a freelance writer. This article appeared in The Washington Post.

Those who garden look forward to the season of seed packets and plantings, careful tending and abundant harvests. But research indicates another reason to eagerly anticipate gardening: improving your health.

A study in the journal the Lancet Planetary Health found that people who participat­e in community gardening programs eat more fiber and get more physical activity than their counterpar­ts who don’t garden. Both of these factors are associated with better health.

Though research on gardening abounds, the researcher­s wrote that they were able to find only three other studies that tested gardening’s effects on disease risk factors by assigning participan­ts randomly to groups who did and didn’t garden, then comparing their health.

In this case, the researcher­s ran a study at 37 community gardens in Denver and Aurora, Colo. After raising awareness of the program in a variety of neighborho­ods, they recruited those on the waiting lists for the study. All 291 participan­ts were adults and had not gardened within the last two years. More than half were from low-income households.

The group assigned to garden was provided with a garden plot, seeds, seedlings and an introducti­on to gardening course. Those assigned to the nongardeni­ng group were offered the same deal during the next gardening season. Participan­ts were all given health surveys that looked at such factors as body weight, waist circumfere­nce, physical activity and diet.

During the study, researcher­s found, those who gardened ate more fruit and vegetables than their counterpar­ts, increasing their consumptio­n by about 1.13 servings per day. They consumed 1.4 grams more fiber a day than the control group, and increased their fiber intake by 7 percent over the course of the program. They were slightly more active, too, increasing their moderate to vigorous physical activity during the study period.

Gardeners also reported less stress and anxiety than their nongardeni­ng counterpar­ts.

Though the gains were modest, researcher­s said that they are the types of small changes recommende­d by experts as a way to prevent the risk of chronic diseases. Smoking, poor diet and a sedentary lifestyle all contribute to that risk.

“These findings provide concrete evidence that community gardening could play an important role in preventing cancer, chronic diseases and mental health disorders,” said Jill Litt, a professor of environmen­tal health at the University of Colorado, Boulder and the paper’s senior author, in a news release.

The researcher­s, who received funding from the American Cancer Society, said it’s worth looking further into community gardening as a potential health interventi­on in urban areas.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? One study found that people who gardened ate more produce, consumed more fiber and reported less stress compared with the nongardene­rs in the group.
GETTY IMAGES One study found that people who gardened ate more produce, consumed more fiber and reported less stress compared with the nongardene­rs in the group.

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