BackgroundThere is mounting anecdotal and empirical evidence that gardening and art-making afford therapeutic benefits.ObjectivesThis randomly controlled pilot study tested the hypothesis that participation in group-based indoor gardening or art-making activities for one hour twice a week for four weeks would provide quantifiably different therapeutic benefits to a population of healthy women ages 26-49.MethodsA population of 42 volunteers was randomly assigned to parallel gardening or art-making treatment groups. A total of 36 participants initiated the treatment protocol and 32 (Gardening n = 15 and Art n = 17) received the interventions and completed all assessments. Treatments included eight one-hour group-based gardening or art interve...
Purpose – The number of gardening-based mental health interventions is increasing, yet when the lite...
Objective. Nature has a significant impact on general well-being. However, till date, little psychop...
Background There is increasing interest in the association between nature, health and wellbeing. Ga...
There is increasing evidence that gardening provides substantial human health benefits. However, no ...
As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and the ensuing economic recession, many people’s mental health...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
The use of gardening as a practice or intervention to create better health has shown promising physi...
Background and aim: Population ageing and its consequences has become a major concern in most countr...
Recent literature has revealed the positive effect of gardening on human health; however, empirical ...
Research on horticultural therapy approaches suggest that its positive impact on clients may extend ...
Horticultural intervention in the form of gardening workshops connect participants to nature while t...
Modern populations face high levels of mental health challenges, chronic diseases, and premature dea...
Background - Allotments in the UK are popular and waiting lists long. There is, however, little evid...
The following study examines the potential benefits of implementing therapeutic gardening and outdoo...
The effect of horticultural therapy (HT) on immune and endocrine biomarkers remains largely unknown....
Purpose – The number of gardening-based mental health interventions is increasing, yet when the lite...
Objective. Nature has a significant impact on general well-being. However, till date, little psychop...
Background There is increasing interest in the association between nature, health and wellbeing. Ga...
There is increasing evidence that gardening provides substantial human health benefits. However, no ...
As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and the ensuing economic recession, many people’s mental health...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
The use of gardening as a practice or intervention to create better health has shown promising physi...
Background and aim: Population ageing and its consequences has become a major concern in most countr...
Recent literature has revealed the positive effect of gardening on human health; however, empirical ...
Research on horticultural therapy approaches suggest that its positive impact on clients may extend ...
Horticultural intervention in the form of gardening workshops connect participants to nature while t...
Modern populations face high levels of mental health challenges, chronic diseases, and premature dea...
Background - Allotments in the UK are popular and waiting lists long. There is, however, little evid...
The following study examines the potential benefits of implementing therapeutic gardening and outdoo...
The effect of horticultural therapy (HT) on immune and endocrine biomarkers remains largely unknown....
Purpose – The number of gardening-based mental health interventions is increasing, yet when the lite...
Objective. Nature has a significant impact on general well-being. However, till date, little psychop...
Background There is increasing interest in the association between nature, health and wellbeing. Ga...