Scientific Reports (Dec 2023)

The effectiveness of nature-based therapy for community psychological distress and well-being during COVID-19: a multi-site trial

  • Yeji Yang,
  • Hyunjin Kim,
  • Minjung Kang,
  • Hyunjin Baik,
  • Yunseok Choi,
  • Eu-Jean Jang,
  • Eun-Jin Chang,
  • Sukyoung Yun,
  • Miok Park,
  • Eunyeong Park,
  • Hojun Yun,
  • Taek-Joo Lee,
  • Yeong-Han Kwon,
  • Kwang-Pyo Hong,
  • Ai-Ran Lee,
  • Songhie Jung,
  • Tai-Hyeon Ahn,
  • Hye-Young Jin,
  • Kee-Hong Choi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-49702-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract During the COVID-19 pandemic, the world population faced various mental health challenges, highlighting a need for new community-based psychosocial interventions. This study aimed to investigate the effectiveness and feasibility of Nature-Based Therapy (NBT) for the community experiencing psychological distress during the pandemic. A multi-site trial comparing NBT and control groups was conducted in Korea with 291 participants exhibiting mild to severe depression or anxiety. A total of 192 participated in 30 sessions of therapeutic gardening, while 99 remained in the control group. Psychological distress and well-being were assessed using seven measures of depression, anxiety, daily activity, life satisfaction, mindfulness, stress, and loneliness. The effect sizes (Cohen’s d) of NBT compared to the control group were medium to large: depression (0.583), anxiety (0.728), daily activity (1.002), life satisfaction (0.786), mindfulness (0.645), stress (0.903), and loneliness (0.695). Multilevel analysis revealed significant Time × Group interaction effects for all measures. Pearson correlation (r = − 0.28 to 0.71) showed that changes in all variables correlated significantly with each other, with small to large effect sizes. Therapeutic alliance at post-test positively moderated the intervention effects on the outcomes. We concluded that NBT is a promising psychosocial intervention for treating psychological distress for community dwellers.