Illawarra Shoalhaven Local Health District, Warrawong, NSW, 2505, Australia.
The University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW, 2522, Australia.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2022 Jun 30;22(1):841. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-08223-8.
Mental health conditions are one of the largest burdens of disease in Australia and globally. There is a need to seek innovative and alternative interventions that can prevent and alleviate mental health symptoms. Nature-based interventions (NBIs), namely programs and activities where individuals engage with natural environments with the aim of improving their health and wellbeing (e.g., nature walking groups), may be such an alternative. This study aimed to explore the perceptions of mental health clinicians on the potential benefits of, and barriers to, implementing NBIs within a community mental health setting.
This study used a qualitative, exploratory research design. Fifteen mental health clinicians were recruited from the Illawarra Shoalhaven Local Health District, Australia, and interviewed (September-October 2021) about their perceptions of NBIs within mental health settings. The semi-structured interviews were analysed using an inductive thematic approach and managed with NVivo.
Mental health clinicians viewed spending time in nature as relaxing, refreshing, and therapeutic. Many described it as part of their lifestyle and encouraged consumers to engage in nature-based activities on their own time. If NBIs were to be introduced as part of mental health services, clinicians expressed willingness to promote them to their consumers. Clinicians listed many potential benefits of NBIs for mental health consumers including improved mood, calmness and relaxation, a sense of empowerment, and social connections. Despite these benefits, clinicians were concerned about a variety of barriers to NBIs including consumers' mental health symptoms such as anxiety or lack of motivation, scepticism, and geographic accessibility, as well as organisational barriers such as policies around safety risk.
Responding to the individual and organisational factors that could hinder the implementation of NBIs while building on the existing evidence of the positive impact of nature on health and wellbeing and, as demonstrated in this study, mental health clinicians' interest and supportiveness of NBIs, mental health services should consider the implementation of NBIs as part of routine practice.
心理健康状况是澳大利亚和全球范围内最大的疾病负担之一。因此需要寻求创新和替代干预措施,以预防和减轻心理健康症状。基于自然的干预措施(NBIs),即个人与自然环境互动以改善其健康和幸福感的计划和活动(例如自然步行团体),可能是一种替代方法。本研究旨在探讨心理健康临床医生对在社区心理健康环境中实施 NBIs 的潜在益处和障碍的看法。
本研究采用定性、探索性研究设计。从澳大利亚伊拉瓦拉肖尔黑文地方卫生区招募了 15 名心理健康临床医生,并对他们在心理健康环境中对 NBIs 的看法进行了半结构化访谈(2021 年 9 月至 10 月)。使用归纳主题方法对访谈进行分析,并使用 NVivo 进行管理。
心理健康临床医生认为在大自然中度过时间可以放松、恢复精神和治疗。许多人将其描述为他们生活方式的一部分,并鼓励消费者在自己的时间里参与自然活动。如果将 NBIs 作为心理健康服务的一部分引入,临床医生表示愿意将其推广给消费者。临床医生列出了 NBIs 对心理健康消费者的许多潜在益处,包括改善情绪、平静和放松、赋权感和社会联系。尽管有这些好处,但临床医生对 NBIs 的各种障碍表示担忧,包括消费者的心理健康症状(如焦虑或缺乏动力)、怀疑态度以及地理可达性,以及组织障碍(如安全风险政策)。
在考虑实施 NBIs 时,需要应对可能阻碍其实施的个体和组织因素,同时利用现有关于自然对健康和幸福感的积极影响的证据,以及本研究中临床医生对 NBIs 的兴趣和支持,心理健康服务应考虑将 NBIs 作为常规实践的一部分。