People exposed to more green space during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic reported significantly less depression and anxiety, according to new University of Colorado Boulder research in the journal PLOS One.
The study also found that, at a time when mental health problems soared due to financial woes, supply shortages and nonstop news coverage of the virus, people sought solace in the great outdoors, with one-third spending more time there than they did pre-COVID.
鈥淭his research shows how critical it is to keep parks and green spaces open in times of crisis,鈥 said senior author Colleen Reid, an assistant professor of geography in the Institute for Behavioral Science. 鈥淚t also shows that, as a public health measure, more effort should be made to put in green spaces and make them accessible.鈥
For the study, the authors presented about 1,200 Denver-area residents with a 30-minute survey gauging their mental health and their perceptions of green space near their home, including: how much there was, whether they could see it, whether it was accessible, how much they used it and its quality. They also collected aerial satellite imagery to objectively quantify greenery in respondents鈥 neighborhoods.
The survey ran from November 2019 to January 2021.
Once COVID-19 emerged and lockdowns ensued, Reid added additional questions, providing a rare opportunity to also look at how the pandemic influenced mental health over time and what was most stressful about it.
鈥淣ot surprisingly, we found that the pandemic impacted mental health negatively,鈥 said co-author Emma Rieves, a master鈥檚 student in the Department of Geography. 鈥淏ut we also found that green space could have a powerful protective effect, even at a time of such extraordinary stressors.鈥
Supply shortages and job losses stressed people out
Surprisingly, the study found no association between being diagnosed with COVID and having poor mental health. But respondents reported that having symptoms, no diagnosis and no way to test was distressing.
Those who lost income or felt they were working in an unsafe environment were also more likely to be stressed or depressed, while the strongest source of mental health problems was a fear of supply shortages (including toilet paper and food).
People who spent a lot of time scrolling the internet looking at the news reported poorer mental health. In contrast, merely having abundant green space nearby, as measured by satellite images, was associated with lower depression scores.
To get the most benefit out of nearby green space, the study found, people had to get out and use it. Those who used green space most had significantly lower anxiety and depression.
鈥淭here are many dimensions of green space, and our study looked closely at how these dimensions impact mental health,鈥 said Rieves, noting that policymakers often rely solely on objective measures, like satellite images or proximity to parks when assessing whether to invest in more greenery in a community.
On a satellite image, Rieves points out, a large patch of greenery could actually be a weed-filled lot. A 鈥榥earby park鈥 could be on the other side of a busy highway.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not just about being able to see trees from your home. The amount, quality and accessibility of that green space matters,鈥 said Rieves.
Many public agencies closed public green spaces, including neighborhood playgrounds and national parks, at the onset of the pandemic for fear that the virus could be easily spread via surfaces. Once parks reopened, with places like gyms, bars and churches still closed, Coloradans flocked to the outdoors: 33% of respondents reported spending more time in parks or on trails than the year before.
The 鈥榖iophilia hypothesis鈥
The study adds to a growing body of evidence suggesting that green space can have a measurable impact on health.
According to one theory, known as the 鈥榖iophilia hypothesis,鈥 humans innately tend to seek connections with green spaces, where the calming environment influences stress hormones in a way that promotes healing and fends off disease.
鈥淭he idea is that we have evolved with nature, and only in the recent past have we been living in the concrete jungle,鈥 said Reid.
One famous even found that when hospital patients had rooms with a window looking out on green space, their wounds healed faster and they required less pain medication than those looking out on a brick wall.
Reid cautioned that correlations between green space and health have been scrutinized, in part because people with higher incomes and, thus, better access to healthy food and health care may also be more able to afford to live near green spaces.
Reid鈥檚 study took those sociodemographic factors into account, along with the many unique circumstances that have emerged during COVID.
After controlling for all the factors, the benefits still remained clear:
鈥淪pend more time outside,鈥 Rieves听said. 鈥淧andemic or no pandemic, it鈥檚 good for your mental health.鈥