Barriers to Participation in Nature Prescriptions: Evidence From a Cross-Sectional Survey of Adults in Australia, India, Singapore, the United Kingdom, and the United States

IF 2 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Michelle Kondo, Deepti Adlakha, Melissa Marselle, Nicole Odell, Katarzyna Olcon, Katherine Deutsch, Xiaoqi Feng, Aaron Hipp, Thomas Astell-Burt
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Abstract

Cities, states, and countries across the globe are recognizing the interconnections of human and planetary health, and are investing in greening. Nevertheless, environmental improvements may not bring adequate changes in exposure needed to reduce chronic disease and improve mental health. Nature prescription, in which a health provider refers a patient to spend time outdoors, is a potential behavioral intervention that could connect people to accessible green spaces. However, formidable patient barriers could reduce the potential to scale-up implementation in equitable and sustained ways. We surveyed 2625 adult respondents within Australia, India, Singapore, the United States, and the United States about their perceptions of a set of seven potential barriers to participation in nature prescriptions. Analyses revealed that respondents in India and Singapore, although most aware of and experienced with nature prescriptions, reported facing greater barriers than in other countries. Weather was the most commonly reported barrier, followed by the lack of time and distance. A lack of interest was a greater barrier among young, urban respondents with a college degree. The barrier of the lack of company was greater for urban residents and for those experiencing financial difficulty. In addition, contrary to many prior studies, we observed greater overall perceived barriers for respondents with higher education levels. Many of the perceived barriers covered by our survey are structurally modifiable, and programs developing in each of these locations may draw from these findings to tailor outreach strategies.

Abstract Image

参与自然处方的障碍:来自澳大利亚、印度、新加坡、英国和美国成年人横断面调查的证据
世界各地的城市、州和国家正在认识到人类和地球健康的相互联系,并正在投资绿化。然而,环境的改善可能不会带来减少慢性疾病和改善精神健康所需的暴露的适当改变。“自然处方”是一种潜在的行为干预,可以将人们与可访问的绿色空间联系起来。然而,巨大的患者障碍可能会降低以公平和持续的方式扩大实施的潜力。我们调查了澳大利亚、印度、新加坡、美国和美国的2625名成年受访者,了解他们对参与自然处方的七个潜在障碍的看法。分析显示,印度和新加坡的受访者虽然对自然处方的了解和经验最多,但报告面临的障碍比其他国家更大。天气是最常见的障碍,其次是缺乏时间和距离。在拥有大学学位的年轻城市受访者中,缺乏兴趣是一个更大的障碍。对于城市居民和那些经历经济困难的人来说,缺乏陪伴的障碍更大。此外,与许多先前的研究相反,我们观察到更高教育水平的受访者的整体感知障碍更大。我们的调查所涵盖的许多感知障碍在结构上是可以修改的,并且在每个这些地方开发的项目可以根据这些发现来定制推广策略。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
8.30%
发文量
423
期刊介绍: Health and Social Care in the community is an essential journal for anyone involved in nursing, social work, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, general practice, health psychology, health economy, primary health care and the promotion of health. It is an international peer-reviewed journal supporting interdisciplinary collaboration on policy and practice within health and social care in the community. The journal publishes: - Original research papers in all areas of health and social care - Topical health and social care review articles - Policy and practice evaluations - Book reviews - Special issues
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