Yes, it’s true, a walk in the woods actually helps with anxiety and depression

Yes, it's true, a walk in the woods actually helps with anxiety and depression

Now it’s well documented: forest therapy is an effective and simple method for dealing with something many people struggle with.

You’ve probably felt it yourself at some point.

After a walk in the woods, your shoulders drop several notches. Your heart stopped pounding. Your thoughts flowed a little more calmly.

It simply became easier to relax. The world looked a little brighter.

You aren’t alone in this experience. Some people call it forest therapy.

We need it.

Young people struggle with anxiety and depression

Depression is unfortunately a common phenomenon. So is anxiety. In Norway, approximately one in ten people will experience anxiety or depression in the course of a year. Often these two disorders occur together. Worldwide, 264 million people suffered from depression in 2020.

New research from NTNU shows that in the era of smartphones and social media, the number of adolescents and young adults in Norway with depression and anxiety has doubled. Forty-four percent of teenage girls in Norway now struggle with stress and heavy thoughts.

Associate professor Simone Grassini wanted to check out how something as simple as a walk in the woods could help with anxiety and depression. He collected all the studies that researchers around the world have carried out on this very topic in the last ten years.

Then he started sorting.

Forest therapy not yet fully developed

Grassini selected all the studies where the researchers included a group that took walks in the woods, and a control group that did not take walks in the woods. Everyone in both groups struggled with anxiety and depression.

Six studies made it through the eye of the needle.

Using diagrams, numbers and columns, the studies all tell us the same thing.

A walk in the woods actually helps with anxiety and depression.

“These walks are an effective and simple method for something that a lot of people struggle with,” says Grassini. He is a neuroscientist and associate professor in psychology at the University of Stavanger. When the study was carried out, he was a researcher at NTNU.

Is it the exercise itself that releases our mental knots? Or is it nature, with the stillness and rustle of the pines? Would it work just as well to just sit on a stump? Or is it the combination of exercise and nature that does the trick? Is a small outing enough or are forest trips necessary on a regular basis?

The simple answer is that it isn’t easy to say, at least not from a scientific point of view. No one has checked it out yet.

“No one has done a systematic analysis of the activity,” says Grassini, “because as we know, all research costs money.”

But we have some pieces of the puzzle.

Less activity in the fear center

Laboratory studies show that even short exposures to images and videos of nature lead to a change in brain activity related to relaxation and well-being.

Other research that shows that exercise itself has a positive effect on the experience of well-being.

“Studies carried out outdoors have shown that even short exposure to a forest environment leads to less activity in the in the brain’s fear center,” says Grassini.

But no scientifically based method exists yet for how forest therapy should be carried out in concrete terms. Is one walk a week enough or do you have to take four? Is half an hour enough or do you have to go for two hours?

The healing power of nature

Although the healing power of nature has not been analyzed using scientific methods, it is something many philosophers have thought a lot about.

“From a philosophical perspective, the results from studies of how being out in nature impacts us aren’t surprising,” says Solveig Bøe, a professor of philosophy at NTNU.

She points to the fundamental fact that humans are also part of nature.

“If we go back far enough in our biological evolutionary history, we’re related to everything that lives and has lived. A philosopher that I’ve worked with for a while, Merleau-Ponty, argues that wherever there is life in nature, there is meaning. This meaning resonates with us,” says Bøe.

She believes that this explains why being out in nature feels meaningful. It can help us to realize that there is something more important than what we go around pondering in our hearts.

“Out in green spaces, surrounded by birdsong, the sound of running water, the smell of vegetation, we understand that we are part of something bigger. It can do us good and help us to forget ourselves for a while,” says Bøe.

More information:
Simone Grassini, A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Nature Walk as an Intervention for Anxiety and Depression, Journal of Clinical Medicine (2022). DOI: 10.3390/jcm11061731

Simone Grassini et al, Watching Nature Videos Promotes Physiological Restoration: Evidence From the Modulation of Alpha Waves in Electroencephalography, Frontiers in Psychology (2022). DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.871143

Sonja Sudimac et al, How nature nurtures: Amygdala activity decreases as the result of a one-hour walk in nature, Molecular Psychiatry (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41380-022-01720-6

Sandra Klaperski et al, Optimizing mental health benefits of exercise: The influence of the exercise environment on acute stress levels and wellbeing, Mental Health & Prevention (2019). DOI: 10.1016/j.mhp.2019.200173

Ryan Hammoud et al, Smartphone-based ecological momentary assessment reveals mental health benefits of birdlife, Scientific Reports (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-20207-6

Journal information:
Molecular Psychiatry

,
Frontiers in Psychology

,
Scientific Reports

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